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Maggie Nelson

The Argonauts

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A groundbreaking memoir that offers fresh and fierce reflections on motherhood, desire, gender, identity and feminism.
At the centre of The Argonauts is the love story between Maggie Nelson and the artist Harry Dodge, who is fluidly gendered. As Nelson undergoes the transformations of pregnancy, she explores the challenges and complexities of mothering and queer family making.
Writing in the tradition of public intellectuals like Susan Sontag, Nelson uses arresting prose even as she questions the limits of language. The Argonauts is an intrepid voyage out to the frontiers of love, language, and family.
This book is currently unavailable
160 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2016
Publication year
2016
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Impressions

  • C Contrerasshared an impression2 years ago
    👍Worth reading
    🔮Hidden Depths
    🚀Unputdownable
    🐼Fluffy
    💧Soppy

  • GisEllashared an impression2 years ago
    👍Worth reading
    🔮Hidden Depths

  • Alexandra Lisogorshared an impression3 years ago
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Quotes

  • finalfadeouthas quoted8 days ago
    But is there really such a thing as nothing, as nothingness? I don’t know. I know we’re still here, who knows for how long, ablaze with our care, its ongoing song.
  • finalfadeouthas quoted10 days ago
    I knew you were a good animal, but felt myself to be standing before an enormous mountain, a lifetime of unwillingness to claim what I wanted, to ask for it. Now here you were, your face close to mine, waiting.
  • finalfadeouthas quoted11 days ago
    And so, shamefully, I looked. I looked for evidence of their unhappiness, all the while repressing the fact that my search reminded me of a particularly dysfunctional moment in Leonard Michaels’s account of his tortured, explosive, and eventually disastrous relationship to his first wife, Sylvia. Upon learning that a friend had an equally horrible relationship with equally horrible fights, Michaels writes: “I was grateful to him, relieved, giddy with pleasure. So others lived this way, too. . . . Every couple, every marriage, was sick. Such thinking, like bloodletting, purged me. I was miserably normal; I was normally miserable.” He and Sylvia marry; a short, miserable time later, she’s dead from forty-seven Seconals.

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