Jacket 21 — February 2003 | # 21 Contents | Homepage | Catalog | |
Jane Sprague reviews
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Self described as a ‘British national of Punjabi origin who lives in Colorado,’ Bhanu Kapil Rider is the author of Autobiography of a Cyborg, (Leroy Chapbook Press, 2000.) Currently writing a novel set in colonial Bengal, The Wolf Girls of Midnapure, Rider teaches at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa University. (Interlope, Issue Seven.) |
Because she arrives, vibrant, over and over again; we are at the beginning of a new history, or rather a process of becoming in which several histories intersect with one another. As a subject for history, woman always occurs simultaneously in several places. (In woman, personal history blends together with the history of all women, as well as national and world history.) (5)
The case could also be made for the book as an investigation of colonialism and the female body itself as the site of colonization and the urgent internal press to reclaim or remake identity. Rider examines the female body as a physical signifier for comprehending one’s history, desires and articulation of experience. ‘My name, my body. Such versions, I occupy. Live in, as surely as a / dung-wall house, a house that does not turn, is not born twice: / skulls, oranges.’ (12) In an excerpt from The Diary of the Wolf Girls of Midnapure , Rider’s ‘Working Note’ provides important context for the arc of her project: I am interested in those subjects — nomads, immigrants, cyborgs, wolf girls — who are segmented and seeking: a woman, for example, re-attributing herself or unfolding to a set plane upon command. What does the shape of her body and her mind look like as she moves through the world? (A woman who, in the narrative, precedes and follows her own birth. The whole body has the same tone, thus no ellipsis, no separate commentaries or asterisks.) That is my experiment: to make the line travel towards a confused origin — hyper-organic, splitting the skin, still livid. (HOW(ever) v. 1, 5, 2001.)
The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers is ordered numerically. With few exceptions, each page contains a response to one question. The order of her original twelve questions is shuffled; some questions are repeated more than once, notably, ‘What are the consequences of silence?’ and ‘Tell me what you know about dismemberment.’ Rider is interested in the questions underneath these questions, ‘5. What is the shape of your body? / 6. Who was responsible for the suffering of your mother?’ (9) The ideas inside the questions and the convergence of both as the book progresses — the answers and questions begin to overlap and blur. Beneath ideas: the tightness in the chest at the beginning of a long
What follows is image after image, presented in a seemingly fragmented style, the sequence of the questions as posed in the body of the text are not sequential, answers to questions do not answer directly, they frequently answer at a slant. The odd brilliance of this book is its surface simplicity. In spare and direct language, Rider weaves in culture specific moments: drinking chai, traveling to Jaipur, smoking biris on a train. She achieves a collage of the heartbreaking dailiness of our lives, ‘You take his battered brown shoes in your arms one by / one, cradling them like the littlest ones with the flapping dusty / tongues, the ones you have to bring inside, to wean.’ (30) The distances between my body and the bodies of the ones I love:
When Rider delves into the interstices of what binds us, what shapes us, it becomes a larger idea and one that is utterly beautiful. Many of the answers deal with the compilation of sense and image memory that serves as a running internal narrative for identity and raise further questions of: who are we? And in relation to what? And what do we remember and why? What effect does this remembering, this carrying have on us? A book, apparently there is a book — I want to make the book of looking for this book — the book of everything that has happened, of everything that will happen. Twenty — four shapes of longing. An abandoned alphabet. Each kiss, each sutured return to the origin. (42)
As if the physical act of remembering, the interrogation of oneself or others and these shifting edges, as if this defining could help us know where we truly are. As the book progresses, the questions begin to merge: ‘What are the consequences of silence? / And what would you say if you could?’ (81) Like the
The book moves into answers of spareness, answers surrounded by white space on the page. All of that white space answers two questions, the actual, and the underneath — longing for the beloved. Longing for the self. Life and death are everywhere intertwined in this book. Love dies. The act of sex ends. Lovers stop being lovers to each other. As in Shakespeare, even sex is a sort of ‘little death’ where coming is ending and a kind of dying. Only, Rider’s deaths are larger, and pile up, accumulate and press on the force in us that is everywhere trying to live, trying to assert what it is. What persists. What defines us. ‘The most orange, untranslatable things I have ever said about my body.’ In the end, The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers raises more questions than it answers. And it does so, beautifully. |
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Works CitedRider, Bhanu Kapil. The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers. Berkeley: Kelsey St. Press, 2001.
———. ‘Working Note: Excerpt from ‘The Diary of the Wolf Girls of Midnapure’’ HOW(ever) 1.5 (2001)
———. ‘BIOS.’ Interlope#7. http://www.interlope.org/issuesevenwriters.html |
Jacket 21 — February 2003
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