Kommande
339:-
A genre-busting encounter between a poet and her ancestral past documenting a startling intersection of queer history, ancient theater, and modern poetry. In 1901, Eva Palmer abandoned her life as a privileged New York socialite, moving to Paris with her lover, the writer, photographer and salonist, Natalie Barney. The two Americans became the center of a wild tangle of lesbian love affairs and backyard performances based in an intentional reimagining of Sappho's work and life. This hotbed of early European modernism saw in the ancient past the possibility for sexual and artistic emancipation, especially for lesbian women. Eva's study of antiquities led her to Greece, where she married Angelos Sikelianos, a visionary poet who would become a Greek national hero. Together, they decided to stage a revival of the ancient Delphic festivals, convinced that it would open a path to world peace. By the end of two festivals, their meticulous reproductions had managed to change the course of modern Greek cultural history, even as their marriage dissolved. Eva returned to the U.S. and spent the next decades of her life homeless and in debt, but she never stopped working, convinced of the revolution of consciousness these art festivals could bring about. Prize-winning American poet Eleni Sikelianos grew up unaware of her illustrious ancestors, and it was not until the age of 20, on her first trip to Greece, that she learned of their legacy. In Memory Rehearsal, Sikelianos unearths the story of her pioneering queer ancestor trying to make a place for herself, in a text that shifts between prose, poetry, imaginary performance texts, fiction, and nonfiction, with archival and family photographs. This is the third book in a trilogy of hybrid memoirs. As Sikelianos reckons with a family history touched by schizophrenia, homelessness, and addiction, she performs an act of recovery, re-situating herself by claiming her lineage.
- Format: Trade paperback
- ISBN: 9780872869448
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 208
- Utgivningsdatum: 2026-07-02
- Förlag: City Lights Books