"Writing into the Rupture": Visual Selves in Mary-Kim Arnold’s Litany for the Long Moment
Meliora: Volume 1, Issue 1. Featuring the scholarship of Catherine Ferrante '21, Sarah Leidich '21, Chaya Sara Oppenheim '21, Hana Rivers '20, Maya Sibul '20, Isabelle Stromberg '21.
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Keywords

Visual Studies
Photography
Asian American Literature
Barthes
Francesca Woodman
Multimedia
Signification
Memorabilia
Critical Race Studies
Racial Body

How to Cite

Rivers, H. (2021). "Writing into the Rupture": Visual Selves in Mary-Kim Arnold’s Litany for the Long Moment. Meliora, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.52214/meliora.v1i1.7935

Abstract

Multimedia texts are gaining more footing in the Asian American literary world, especially following Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s pre-eminent Dictee (1982). While lesser known, Mary-Kim Arnold’s Litany for the Long Moment (2018) is a highly referential lyric essay that employs visual elements, including personal ephemera, to consider the unrelenting complexities of Asian American identity. Analyzing Arnold’s formal intervention into Asian American literature through Francesca Woodman’s photography and Roland Barthes’ photography theory reveals that visual subjects are evasive and unknowable. Paradoxically, memorabilia has the power to rupture linear notions of time and cast into doubt what we know about past and present selves. Arnold’s engagement with the visual also extends to the body, and throughout the text she unsettles hegemonic constructions of gender and racial signification. Ultimately, an analysis of Litany for the Long Moment reveals that visual subjects rupture the concept of a stable self. Throughout this thesis, I draw from the fields of photography, poststructuralism, and critical race studies to argue that visual representation is not a sufficient mode of racial empowerment. Building off of Arnold’s claims about “writing into the rupture,” lack is not a closure, but an opening through which we can interrogate what it means to be a self.

https://doi.org/10.52214/meliora.v1i1.7935
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Copyright (c) 2021 Hana Rivers