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Art and sustenance in the work of Sara Baume

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Author
Pilný, OndřejORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-2747-5634WoS Profile - J-3032-2017Scopus Profile - 57216142512
Publication date
2024
Published in
Irish Studies Review
Volume / Issue
32 (2)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 0967-0882
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1469-9303
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  • Faculty of Arts

This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1080/09670882.2024.2333576

Abstract
The question of what role literature and art may play has become all the more urgent amidst the present intersectional crisis. This article discusses the oeuvre of author and visual artist Sara Baume which invites engagement with central aspects of this crisis: humanity's impact on nature and the resulting climate change, and the effects of neoliberal capitalism. Discussing Baume's three novels (Spill Simmer Falter Wither, A Line Made by Walking, and Seven Steeples) together with her non-fictional narrative Handiwork and the performance piece "The Alphabet of Birds," the essay argues that while it might be justified to approach Baume's work as poignant critique of the Anthropocene and its attendant ecological and spiritual devastation, it distinctly transcends such instrumentalist critical paradigms. Stoically lyrical about nature interlaced with variegated detritus, and using protagonists positioned on the margins of society, Baume offers an extended meditation on the role of art at the time of crisis and the possibilities of drawing sustenance from artistic creation. As such, Baume's work engagingly illustrates what Derek Attridge has termed the "singularity" of literature and art, resisting predetermined agendas (including those vitally beneficial) and providing a repeatable opportunity for a potentially risky encounter with alterity.
Keywords
climate change, crisis, Derek Attridge, instrumentalism, neoliberalism, Sara Baume
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2836
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WOS:001203823500001
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85190455752
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Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International

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