In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha García

Critics Sharon Keefe Ugalde and Tina Escaja have called the poetry of Concha García “enigmatic,” “unique,” and “avant-garde.” Studies of her work to date tend to attribute the fragmentation and discontinuity of her poetic discourse to her rejection of phallologocentric language. While one of her wor...

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Main Author: Martha LaFollette Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New Prairie Press 2012-06-01
Series:Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
Online Access:http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol36/iss2/6
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spelling doaj-a0cf76de43a3417594e5cb4afbbb5ce02020-11-25T02:30:42ZengNew Prairie PressStudies in 20th & 21st Century Literature2334-44152012-06-0136210.4148/2334-4415.17835766336In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha GarcíaMartha LaFollette MillerCritics Sharon Keefe Ugalde and Tina Escaja have called the poetry of Concha García “enigmatic,” “unique,” and “avant-garde.” Studies of her work to date tend to attribute the fragmentation and discontinuity of her poetic discourse to her rejection of phallologocentric language. While one of her work’s chief concerns is indeed her speaker’s sense of a radical difference and alienation based on gender, her poetry at the same time directs her reader’s attention to more general ontological considerations. Rather than clearly recounting the events of the life of her poetic protagonist, she rejects the distillations and simplifications that linear narration presupposes in order to explore the textures of being in the world—the moments of daily existence and the way in which what matters to the individual subject is actually experienced. Among the quotations García uses to introduce segments of her 2008 book Acontecimiento are several that can be linked to notions of authenticity in Heidegger’s Being and Time . This essay proposes to use Acontecimiento as a point of departure to examine the connections between García’s distinctive and at times enigmatic poetry and a particular view of time and place akin to Heidegger and his concept of Dasein. It anticipates that her incorporation of Heidegger, in its lucidity and eclecticism, will have postmodern characteristics that reflect the freshness of García’s poetic vision.http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol36/iss2/6
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martha LaFollette Miller
spellingShingle Martha LaFollette Miller
In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha García
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
author_facet Martha LaFollette Miller
author_sort Martha LaFollette Miller
title In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha García
title_short In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha García
title_full In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha García
title_fullStr In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha García
title_full_unstemmed In the Heideggerian Tradition: Acontecimiento by Concha García
title_sort in the heideggerian tradition: acontecimiento by concha garcía
publisher New Prairie Press
series Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
issn 2334-4415
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Critics Sharon Keefe Ugalde and Tina Escaja have called the poetry of Concha García “enigmatic,” “unique,” and “avant-garde.” Studies of her work to date tend to attribute the fragmentation and discontinuity of her poetic discourse to her rejection of phallologocentric language. While one of her work’s chief concerns is indeed her speaker’s sense of a radical difference and alienation based on gender, her poetry at the same time directs her reader’s attention to more general ontological considerations. Rather than clearly recounting the events of the life of her poetic protagonist, she rejects the distillations and simplifications that linear narration presupposes in order to explore the textures of being in the world—the moments of daily existence and the way in which what matters to the individual subject is actually experienced. Among the quotations García uses to introduce segments of her 2008 book Acontecimiento are several that can be linked to notions of authenticity in Heidegger’s Being and Time . This essay proposes to use Acontecimiento as a point of departure to examine the connections between García’s distinctive and at times enigmatic poetry and a particular view of time and place akin to Heidegger and his concept of Dasein. It anticipates that her incorporation of Heidegger, in its lucidity and eclecticism, will have postmodern characteristics that reflect the freshness of García’s poetic vision.
url http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol36/iss2/6
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