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Lauren Elkin
Lauren Elkin is most recently the author of No. 91/92: notes on a Parisian commute (Semiotext(e)/Fugitives) and the UK translator of Simone de Beauvoir's previously unpublished novel, The Inseparables (Vintage). Her previous book Flâneuse: Women Walk the City (Chatto/FSG) was a finalist for the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay, a New York Times Notable Book of 2017, and a BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week. Her essays have appeared in Granta, the London Review of Books, Harper’s, the New York Times, and Frieze, among others. Her next book, Art Monsters, will be out in July 2023 (Chatto/FSG). She lives in London.

Articles Available Online


Maria Gainza’s ‘Optic Nerve’

Book Review

May 2019

Lauren Elkin

Book Review

May 2019

In his foreword to A Thousand Plateaus, on the pleasures of philosophy, and of Deleuze and Guattari’s philosophy in particular, Brian Massumi writes:  ...

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Issue No. 8

Barking From the Margins: On écriture féminine

Lauren Elkin

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Issue No. 8

 I. Two moments in May May 2, 2011. The novelists Siri Hustvedt and Céline Curiol are giving a talk...

Caves, sleep, absence of light     1 Oh what is this light that holds us fast? Frank O’Hara [1]   I was about to move house and the move was happening very quickly My new home was just four miles east but I was leaving the part of London where I’d been born and had lived for most of my life Although the reasons for moving were happy ones, I hadn’t anticipated the level of unsettlement it would bring about One day, feeling overwhelmed by the detail of it all, I decided that what I really needed was to live alone in a cave I was walking past a cinema and went into whatever was showing just to be able to sit in the dark It was a film about a cave[2]   The Chauvet Cave was discovered in 1994 It had long ago been sealed off by rockfall, leaving its 32,000-year-old paintings perfectly preserved  The pale walls are covered in bison, horses, rhinoceroses, lions and bears They are strikingly fluid – a lion’s profile is given in a single six-foot-long stroke – but the artist has done even more to bring them alive The cave is full of outcrops and recesses, the walls ripple and dip, and the animals have been drawn accordingly  One bison has been given eight legs and a rhinoceros a series of six horns to indicate, like a series of frames, that they are moving  I was in a cave that was a cinema watching a film about a cave that was a cinema   The archaeologists and historians mapping and researching the cave had the open mind, and open imagination, that perhaps comes from operating so far beyond the human scale One said that he dreamt of lions ‘Real lions or painted lions?’  ‘Both’ He sounded surprised to be asked to make the distinction Another tried to explain how the world might have been perceived 32,000 years ago, describing an everyday condition of metamorphosis: ‘A tree can speak … a wall can talk to us, refuse or accept us’   In the cinema – a place of talking

Contributor

August 2014

Lauren Elkin

Contributor

August 2014

Lauren Elkin is most recently the author of No. 91/92: notes on a Parisian commute (Semiotext(e)/Fugitives) and the UK...

The End of Francophonie: The Politics of French Literature

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Issue No. 2

Lauren Elkin

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Issue No. 2

I. We were a couple of minutes late for the panel we’d hoped to attend. The doors were closed and there was a surly-looking...

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Interview

June 2011

Interview with Jorge Semprun

TR. Jacques Testard

Pierre Testard

Gwénaël Pouliquen

Interview

June 2011

The great Spanish-born writer Jorge Semprún died on Tuesday 8 June 2011 in Paris, aged 87. A Spanish Civil...

Prize Entry

April 2015

Les Archives du Coeur

Paul McQuade

Prize Entry

April 2015

The bike wheels skit and bounce on the loose dirt path. The smell of hot rubber and the smell...

Art

Issue No. 10

Patterns

Christian Newby

Art

Issue No. 10

 

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