Twenty Square Feet of Skin: 21st Century Essays
Autor Megan Baxteren Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 mai 2023
With the input of Prince, Walt Whitman, Don Johnson, Andrew Wyeth, Meriwether Lewis, and others, Baxter reflects on love, identity, and belonging by looking closely at her skin, toenails, and DNA. Playful, wandering, and deeply felt, Twenty Square Feet of Skin weaves a strange, rich tapestry of flesh and bones, art and body, skin and scar. In embracing the beauty and peril of physicality in crystalline detail, Baxter asks us all to ponder what makes us human within these frail, flawed, powerful, and wonderful bodies of ours.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 0814258689
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Mad Creek Books
Seria 21st Century Essays
Recenzii
“Oh, the things we do to our vulnerable and resilient bodies—wound and embellish, train and remake, hide and expose—and, if intent on an authentic and ever-deepening relationship with them, we learn, finally, to lavish them with care and attention, and strengthen them, as Megan Baxter writes in her wild-ranging and intimate collection, for this ‘beautiful mess of living.’” —Lia Purpura, author of All the Fierce Tethers
“Twenty Square Feet of Skin grapples with what it means to be a body moving through this world in this moment—these essays wrestle with what it means to be radically alive. Life is a bloody business, and the best one we’ve got. Megan Baxter shows us this in a collection filled with marvels.” —Joni Tevis, author of The World Is on Fire
Notă biografică
Megan Baxter holds an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Vermont College of Fine Arts and a BFA in Poetry from Goddard College. She is the author of The Coolest Monsters and Farm Girl: A Memoir.
Extras
The strata of our skin resemble slices of the earth, where twenty-five to thirty layers of skin cells separate us from the outside world. Scratch your epidermis and you might flake off a few dead cells, but cut into your dermis and you'll bleed and slap your hand to the cut in pain. It is in the dermis that tattoo ink is deposited and where, as the years of a life progress, the ink sinks like heavy water, fading away through layers of skin like a figure retreating into shadow.
There are marks that fate applied to our bodies: freckles, moles, and scars-from falls, mean housecats, sharp kitchen knives, and slippery rocks in the water holes where we learned to swim-and then there are marks we etch into our skin deliberately: razor nicks, piercings, tattoos.
The average adult lives within twenty square feet of skin, roughly the size of a large baby blanket, although shaped, of course, not like a blanket but like a human. A big canvas. Skin covered in ink doesn't much resemble our naked dead layers. It looks like snake and bird feather, scale and leather.
Tattoos are often the language of the dead because skin can speak for us when we are gone. Sailors hoped their ink would identify their bodies if they drowned at sea. Salt and water do horrible things to a body, erasing all personality, removing eyes, wiping faces clean, but even stretched and water-logged a tattoo remains locked in flesh.
Anchors, pirate queens, bleeding hearts-all offered something like an ID card. For the inked mummies of the Euro-Asian steppe and the bodies of the Iceman and an Egyptian priestess . . . what did their dots and dashes and their swirling chimerical animals mean to their owners? Perhaps only that they had names, even in death.
I am certain that I began drawing on myself early. I drew on all things, so it seems fitting that my skin was also my canvas. In school I doodled on my hands and arms, writing notes that blossomed into flowers and vines. But that ink scrubbed away or smeared off on my cheek in the night. Like most kids who grew up in the country, I was checked with scars on my arms and legs from bike accidents, barbed wire, the blade of the pocketknife I had stolen from my father, a fishhook, a mean pine bough, the barbs of blackberry and raspberry bushes.
My skin, if I consider it, is not particularly special. It is neither oily nor dry. It isn't a large hide, not quite twenty square feet, and beyond the scratches and scrapes of childhood it has escaped real damage, enduring only moderate acne during adolescence and again during a rough spot in my late twenties.
But I am inscribed with images, electric with ink. See me naked, or moving through the water, swimming in clear lakes, see me in a sundress or walking the trash to the curb, see me stretching my muscles toward the sun, see me showering off the sweat of the day, and see my arms and legs illustrated, my back and foot patterned, my hipbone stamped with pigment, my shoulder opening wings of ink.
Cuprins
A Deliberate Thing I Said Once to My Skin
On Plucking White Hairs
Hunger
Heartbeat
On Running
Election Day
Live Find
On Teaching Brian Doyle's "Leap" to Students Born after 9/11
Love Lace
A Model Home
Ink
On Night
Muse
Green Thumb
On Harvesting
Polish
On Revision
Descriere
The essays in Twenty Square Feet of Skin tell their stories through the body—encased as it is in “that greatest of organs, that membrane that protects the individual from the universe”—as Megan Baxter’s entrée to and home within the larger world that surrounds her. What does a tattoo mean? How can plastic surgery transform? What is the history of pedicures? Where does the mind wander on a long run? Through every example, Baxter writes toward a greater understanding of how self-knowledge is forged through physical experiences.
With the input of Prince, Walt Whitman, Don Johnson, Andrew Wyeth, Meriwether Lewis, and others, Baxter reflects on love, identity, and belonging by looking closely at her skin, toenails, and DNA. Playful, wandering, and deeply felt, Twenty Square Feet of Skin weaves a strange, rich tapestry of flesh and bones, art and body, skin and scar. In embracing the beauty and peril of physicality in crystalline detail, Baxter asks us all to ponder what makes us human within these frail, flawed, powerful, and wonderful bodies of ours.