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The Paper Nautilus
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
The Paper Nautilus
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Michael Jackson
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:274 | Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 130 |
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Category/Genre | Memoirs Prose - non-fiction |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781988531793
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Classifications | Dewey:NZ828.3 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Otago University Press
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Imprint |
Otago University Press
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Publication Date |
29 November 2019 |
Publication Country |
New Zealand
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Description
The Paper Nautilus is about loss the forms it takes, how we go on living in the face of it, and the mysterious ways that new life and new beginnings are born of brokenness. The paper nautilus provides a vivid image of this interplay of death and rebirth since, for new life to begin, the angelically beautiful but fragile shell that sustained a former life must be shattered. Michael Jackson has recourse to his ethnographic fieldwork among the Kuranko of Sierra Leone, as well as autobiography and fiction, in exploring his theme. This book crosses and blends genres most engagingly. Beginning as a series of essays, it gradually morphs into a mesmerising work of the imagination in which the boundary between author and other becomes blurred, and the line between fact and fiction erased. Through novels, poetry, and unorthodox theoretical texts, Michael Jackson has done more than any other living scholar to explore and expand forms of ethnographic writing. His encounters in Sierra Leone have inspired a series of publications that move progressively free from the bounds of standard genre from classical monograph to fable analysis to oral history to a variety of biography/memoir hybrids so as to explore various constellations of consistent themes including travel, struggle, storytelling, social interaction, and personal introspection. Samuel Mark Anderson (American Ethnologist 43 (2), 2016)
Author Biography
US-resident New Zealand writer Michael Jackson is the author of 35 works of anthropology, poetry, fiction and memoir, and is internationally renowned for his work in the field of existential anthropology. In New Zealand he is best known for his poetry and creative non-fiction. Latitudes of Exile was awarded the Commonwealth Poetry Prize in 1976, and Wall won the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry in 1981. His most recent books include Harmattan: A philosophical fiction (2015), Selected Poems (2016), and The Varieties of Temporal Experience: Travels in philosophical, historical and ethnographic time (2018).
ReviewsThrough novels, poetry, and unorthodox theoretical texts, Michael Jackson has done more than any other living scholar to explore and expand forms of ethnographic writing. His encounters in Sierra Leone have inspired a series of publications that move progressively free from the bounds of standard genre, from classical monograph to fable analysis to oral history to a variety of biography/memoir hybrids, so as to explore various constellations of consistent themes including travel, struggle, storytelling, social interaction, and personal introspection. Samuel Mark Anderson, American Ethnologist 43 (2), 2016 The Varieties of Temporal Experience is a gripping, challenging work that brings a unique voice to questions about how we experience time. To enable the reader to dwell in experiences of time in its variety and to experience firstness, providing gentle nudges but not overwhelming the reader with a heavy apparatus, is no small achievement. Veena Das, Johns Hopkins University on The Varieties of Temporal Experience, Columbia University Press (2018)
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