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1 - The Transliterary: The Novel and Other Multimedia Horizons Beyond (and Close to) the Textual

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 December 2023

Jane Elizabeth Lavery
Affiliation:
University of Southampton
Sarah Bowskill
Affiliation:
Queen's University Belfast
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Summary

A PERIPATETIC BUT NECESSARY PREAMBLE

To be honest, I did not set out deliberately to reach the “transliterary.” Instead, it occurred in a natural way. I have always been very visual: in my writing the importance of the eye and the look is essential (“The look is the erection of the eye,” states Lacan). Also, many times, in moments of sterility or crisis, I turn to books with images and photographs: it is a way of freeing myself. I have been a writer since early childhood (I began to write at fourteen, and to publish aged seventeen), although my first lessons about stories were from a television program called Galería Nocturna (Nicht Gallery). There I learned how to build the framework for a structure which, later, in the Faculty of Philosophy and Arts at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, I discovered was a process described as In medias res (in the middle of things), in terms of chronology or retrospective. But I would say that, above all other definitions, I am a writer, because for me language has always had a constitutive register and rhythm, and I am a narrator and not a poet, because for me having a story to tell is paramount. But I feed myself on the visual, and when I am in the process of creation, while I am writing a novel or a story, I sense visual images within me that help me draw close to my literary discoveries. One example: when I was working on the novel Las ninfas a veces sonrien (When Nymphs Smile), I frequently became absorbed doing little drawings of droplets or leaves or petals which sprang up one at a time until they formed a gentle flow. The image turned out to be significant because the novel deals with a contemporary nymph who from the first chapter declares that she flows like a fountain. That drawing later found expression in the silhouette of a statue that gave rise to the installation and image that appeared on the cover of the book: a sculpture of white alabaster that I bought in a garden center and which I modified by painting her lips with red lipstick, and sticking on petals from artificial roses which spilled down from her chest to her feet in a vermilion cascade.

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