Now is the time to take the Archi-Poetry Leap:
“The language revising its own architectures is the cloud palace and drift of your desire.”
—Robert Duncan, Notebook 31
[as cited by Steve McCaffery in “ParaPoetics and the Architectural
Leap” in 'A Time for the Humanities: Futurity and the Limits of
Autonomy' (Fordham 2008)]
2 choice McCaffery quotes, that I agree with (if that matters):
1) “We must remain alert to architecture’s ominous expansion in the
hyper-realism of the neoliberal dream, alert to the colonizing force in
which architecture is mobilized by a compound telos of
planning-for-profit.” p104.
2) “Why the leap into architecture?
From ’stanza’ to the ‘prison-house of language’, architectural figures
dominate within the very formulation of the linguistic. Architectural
metaphors haunt writing to a degree sufficient to cause us to question a
merely benign metaphoric presence. One of Heidegger’s lasting insights
is into how both language and architecture ground us in the world. In
architecture, as in language, human beings dwell (poetically or not)
whether in open mobility or confinement. Derrida observes, ‘We appear to
ourselves only through an experience of spacing which is already marked
by architecture.’ Heidegger and Derrida alike suggest that prior to
becoming social subjects, we are all architectural bodies [cf. Arakawa
Gins]. We need, however, to add to Derrida’s grammatological conception
of architecture as ‘a writing space, a mode of spacing which makes a
place for events' the facts that architecture too is the materialized
conception of dwelling and the dwelling is fundamentally a relation of
ontology to spaces. Architecture in that enriched sense serves to return
being to its problems by way of 'oikos' rather than 'poiesis'. And if
Bachelard is correct when claiming that all inhabited space bears the
essence of the notion of home, then the link between reading and
dwelling appears to be far from a strained analogy.” p105.
I have more work to do, on #archipoetry from the side of the poets...
Thank you Adam Katz and Garry Thomas Morse for the breadcrumb trail.
Link to source text here, or via your library > A Time for the Humanities