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La Medusa
 
 
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La Medusa [Paperback]

Vanessa Place (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Dazzling and daze-inducing, La Medusa returns us to the ambitious, difficult, and serious work of Joyce, Eliot, Pound, Stein, and Beckett. Like Joyce’s Ulysses, La Medusa is an investigation into the nature of experience. Los Angeles takes the role of Dublin.  The brain and its double cortex generate the stylistic intricacies that the organs and senses do in Joyce.  And above all, it is a female epic, in which the swirling city-universe is explored and shaped by the petrifying eye and intellect of the wily Medusa, her coiling locks extending everywhere.”
--Michael Silverblatt, Bookworm, KCRW Public Radio.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 616 pages
  • Publisher: Fiction Collective 2; 2 edition (August 28, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1573661457
  • ISBN-13: 978-1573661454
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.9 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #772,026 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Vanessa Place is a writer, a lawyer, and co-director of Les Figues Press. She is author of Dies: A Sentence (2006), La Medusa (2008), and Notes on Conceptualisms, co-authored with Robert Fitterman (2009), and The Guilt Project: Rape, Morality and Law (2010). A book of conceptual poetry, Statement of Facts, will be published in France by éditions è®e, as Exposé des Faits; a trilogy of conceptual work, Statement of Facts, Statement of the Case, and Argument, is forthcoming from Blanc Press (USA). Her Factory-type chapbook series is available via oodpress (Brazil). Place is also a regular contributor to X-tra Art Quarterly, and has lectured and performed internationally.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Briliant and Engaging..., November 30, 2010
This review is from: La Medusa (Paperback)
La Medusa takes on the impossible challenge: to write a book about the legendary city of Los Angeles, a city so de-centered that no book could possibly encompass its vastly different representations, no book could avoid the ephemerality of an attempt at a concretization of LA, no book could represent the gaze, tame the city as monster and insert it into the artificially rendered pages of a book. But this is why La Medusa can, and does, knowing that the city is something that is constantly becoming but never is.

Los Angeles is a city that is there and here, a city constantly remaking itself and artificially rendered as well, so that the various consciousnesses that make up Place's epic novel are not meant to be definitive, rather artificial versions of artificial realities that have left some feelers behind in the "real world."

Vanessa Place's La Medusa is described as a "polyphonic novel of post-conceptual consciousness," yet this novel is more than just a return to a Joycean experience, as Michael Silverblatt comments, and it is more than just a theoretical description of the phenomenal properties of consciousness in narrative. Rather, the novel resists Daniel Dennet's famous claim that consciousness is simply a kind of illusion or epiphenomenon and provokes the reader into a consideration of the wages of consciousness and the agency we so fervently believe it comes along with--that is, consciousness is often taken for granted as innately tied to everyday perception but is something rather more artificial and flexible. Not only does the novel offer a literary enactment of the kind of consciousness that drives the dream of Los Angeles, the reader must construct her own phenomenological self-model during the process of reading.

Vanessa Place has written elsewhere, "Ergo no single story can be told because there is never just one." Yet there is an ontological paradox of quantum physics, as she continues, "for it is only the single observer who can create wholecloth reality from piecemeal particles--the singular consciousness in all its individual multiplicity transforms the multiplicity of the quantum flux." Place's own book is an ambitious architecture of human consciousness mapped over the vast landscape of a sprawling city. Yet, as the reader delves in and out of the minds of characters (a doctor, a trucker, an ice cream vendor, a corpse--to name a few), what they learn to see is not the world through another character's eyes, but to see the world differently through their own again. The reader's own process of narrativizing-as-reading becomes mapped onto the narrative architecture of the multimodal world of the page. The text is fragmented into bursts of language and emotion, for as Max Planck discovered, on the quantum level, energy works in bursts, not in a steady Joycean stream.

So how does this text operate, on a quantum level or on a greater one? How does it look to the history of literature, mending the broken bodies of texts, tattered from history and time? It is easier to repair a broken pump than it is to heal a broken metaphor, especially when we have forgotten the difference. La Medusa maps a sprawling metropolis and metaphor for an artificial consciousness, ultimately asking the reader to reconsider their own preconceptions of the way their own minds work. It is in the constellation of lack, built upon the intrusions and disruptions of an architectural narrative, that we as readers realize that none of us are really in complete control of our own perceptions. In reading a text where we must learn how to read again, where does the dream of Los Angeles lie? La Medusa echoes softly: We are in the dream, and yet the dream is inside us.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Snakes Make Brains With Lots of Talky Tongues, December 19, 2010
By 
Anna Joy Springer "Anna Joy" (San Diego, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: La Medusa (Paperback)
La Medusa is SOOOOO good. It's like being inside Medusa's skull, where the snakes live beneath the surface of the scalp on the inside of the skull where the hairdye drains to create tumors. Only inside the skull where the snakes coil together and make a brain, it's also Los Angeles, and if you use a microscope there's Hollywood, and on closer view there's I Love Lucy. You don't just see with this microscope, you HEAR. You hear songs and language that doesn't seem to make any sense, but does, like as if the city of LA were hissing and you could isolate what each snake were saying, only actually, the whole inside of the skull is a production studio full of stage sets, and that too is the city and consciousness. That's what this book is like. You don't need to know Joyce or even Greek Epics to love this book. You do need the courage to nest with snakes, and not just your own. Eat this book.
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