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Read By: Isabella Hammad

Read By: Isabella Hammad

From92Y's Read By


Read By: Isabella Hammad

From92Y's Read By

ratings:
Length:
8 minutes
Released:
Sep 6, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Isabella Hammad on her selection: Prisoner of Love is Jean Genet’s strange, recursive, resistant chronicle of the time he spent in the early 1970s with the Palestinian fedayeen in the refugee camps in Jordan. Edward Said called it “a seismographic reading, drawing and exposing the fault lines that a largely normal surface had hidden.” Throughout the book Genet meditates on the Black Panthers, whom he had visited in March 1970, just a few months prior to joining the Palestinians. In each context he describes feeling like a “dreamer inside a dream"; in each context he felt at home. He considers the similarities of the movements--both peoples are deprived of territory from which to launch their revolutions, and therefore rely on spectacle to assert themselves. But spectacle is transitory, and sometimes shades into illusion. Spectacle, says Genet, is  “the product of despair.” Prisoner of Love at Bookshop.org Music: "Shift of Currents" by Blue Dot Sessions // CC BY-NC 2.0
Released:
Sep 6, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (83)

A new podcast where today’s finest writers read the work that matters to them—from their homes, to yours. Produced and commissioned by the 92nd Street Y's Unterberg Poetry Center, a home for live readings of literature for over 80 years.