Reuben Mackey Reuben Mackey i(22889678 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Inside the House of Fiction : The Creative-critical Possibility of Gerald Murnane’s A Million Windows Reuben Mackey , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue , no. 72 2024;
'To grapple with the meaning of creative-critical writing today, it is necessary to begin
from within literature. Too often, literary critics take up a disinterested position outside
the text, which foregoes the ways in which the critic is always entangled with the text’s
meanings. Through a reading of Gerald Murnane’s A Million Windows (2014), I
propose a model for how a critic might read from within a literary text. I demonstrate
how Murnane’s fiction – through the use of estrangement – entangles the reader-critic
into performing acts of extension, rather than explication. With Murnane’s fiction, a
critic must embrace – extend themselves into – a fictional landscape where “it [is]
impossible to accept that the last page of a book of fiction was any sort of boundary or
limit” (Murnane, 2014, p. 20). Such extended reading opens new possibilities for
criticism’s form.' 

(Publication abstract)

1 Something for the Pain Reuben Mackey , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: Meanjin , June vol. 81 no. 2 2022; (p. 208-210) Meanjin Online 2022;

— Review of Grimmish Michael Winkler , 2021 single work novel
1 Reading Brian Castro's Shanghai Dancing at the Bottom of the Sea Reuben Mackey , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Antipodes , June vol. 34 no. 1 2020; (p. 101-112)

'In the book H.C. for Life, That Is to Say …, Jacques Derrida implores us to "imagine a reading at the bottom of the elemental sea" (29). Following on from Derrida, this essay shows how such a reading might be possible through an analysis of Brian Castro's novel Shanghai Dancing. To a large extent, the current critical literature on Castro's novel highlights how it resists traditional reading methods and practices but fails to think through how this impacts the way the critic should write about the novel. To do this, I argue that Castro's tropes and metaphors for writing—dancing, doppelgängers, phantom brothers, ghosts, the sea, typhoons, and flowers—are also metaphors and tropes for reading, which in turn demand a figurative response from the critic. The novel demands to be read as if from the bottom of the sea, which emphasizes Harold Bloom's idea that "every good reader properly desires to drown" (Anxiety of Influence, 29).'  (Publication abstract)

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