Ban En Banlieue

(Author)
Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$15.95  $14.83
Publisher
Nightboat Books
Publish Date
Pages
112
Dimensions
6.0 X 7.5 X 0.5 inches | 0.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781937658243

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About the Author
BHANU KAPIL is a British-Indian emigrant to the United States. She is the author of five full-length works of poetry/prose: The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers (2001), Incubation: a space for monsters (2006), humanimal [a project for future children] (2009), Schizophrene (2011), and Ban en Banlieue (2015). Since 2007, she has been incubating Ban through performances, talks, and collaborations in the U.S., India, and the U.K. She teaches Interdisciplinary Studies at Naropa University in Boulder, CO.
Reviews
Endorsements: Time Out New York chooses Ban en Banlieue as one of their most anticipated books of 2015 Review Quotes "The project is presented as an abandoned novel that reads as a document of Kapil's expansive and varied process of researching, planning, and writing. "A brown girl on the floor of the world" is the central image, and the porous relationship between Ban's story and the story of Kapil writing and thinking about Ban is fundamental throughout. Kapil casts and recasts descriptions of Ban alongside documentation of the author's own acts of lying down, undertaken through performances, protests, and somatic exercises. The result is a complex and deeply engaged "literature that is not made from literature."--Publishers Weekly "It is not a novel so much as a birth, a death, a violent "discharge." It was born from an accumulation, a messy building up of notes which was--according to Kapil--assembled by chopping it up on a butcher's block. The body of Ban En Banlieue was assembled through violence, a body assembled by means of its own violent deconstruction. Even unto itself, this might seem like a self-contradiction that cannot be reconciled. Kapil's beautiful, bleeding, half-dying, half-living, anti-novel is well aware of this."--Meghan Lamb, Entropy Magazine