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Bioregional Biography and the Geography of Affect: Spatialized Somnambulance in Alice Oswald’s Sleepwalk on the Severn

Bristow, Thomas

Bioregional Biography and the Geography of Affect: Spatialized Somnambulance in Alice Oswald’s Sleepwalk on the Severn Thumbnail


Authors

Thomas Bristow



Abstract

At the centre of Oswald’s second book-length poem, Sleepwalk on the Severn (2009), lies a conflation of the feminine gendered moon and an elderly woman dressed in black, pictured against rainfall at night. Distinctions of kind and various senses of incongruence are evident markers in the text that denotes changeability of humans in the unfixed environment. It is with a sensitivity to our own understanding of the hydrologic cycle and our planet’s relation to its moon that Oswald deconstructs textual markers of subject positions; in Sleepwalk identity—individual and communal—is aligned to poetic voice, which in itself is impressionable and unfixed, subject to specific situations in which the text and space are imbricated, one with the other. This essay argues that environmentally emplaced affect can be located through an attention to Oswald’s concrete, spatialised ecopoetic ‘registers’ (voices) and an undulating, accumulative literary score that underpin Sleepwalk’s geographic imaginary.

Citation

Bristow, T. (2015). Bioregional Biography and the Geography of Affect: Spatialized Somnambulance in Alice Oswald’s Sleepwalk on the Severn. Australasian journal of ecocriticism and cultural ecology, 4, 1-21

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 25, 2017
Publication Date Jan 1, 2015
Deposit Date Oct 25, 2017
Publicly Available Date Nov 30, 2017
Journal Australasian journal of ecocriticism and cultural ecology
Electronic ISSN 1839-843X
Publisher Association for the Study of Literature, Environment & Culture – Australia & New Zealand
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Pages 1-21
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1341823
Publisher URL https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/index.php/AJE/article/view/10617

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