Koel

Cordite Publishing Inc.
Jen Crawford, introduction by Divya Victor
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Crawford tills the ecological value of mnemonic and affective archives — where an early subjective attachment to the natural overcomes exploitative human-nature relationships. Koel creates a third mindscape that explores cohabitant intimacies across species within the warm and dewy contexts of childhood memory, adolescent desire, and the adult effort to survive without harming other creatures. 


'I wrote most of this book on campus in Singapore, surrounded by a ring of jungle that couldn't encroach as fast as it was being thinned out. The circles and mosses of that location tilt and transect others – Auckland, Bicol, an empty Bangkok penthouse, and somewhere else, entirely see-through. It seemed important to be as close to sleep as possible, so I closed windows and wore headphones. Not to shut things out or make them stranger, but to soften and modulate the tensions of exchange.

In Bangkok, excavators swim up and down the canals. They float on barges and scoop themselves through the water. The water pools and resists, carrying places to places on its way.

In the 'epoch of simultaneity' not all spaces are equally accessible to thought or description. Rituals of immersion, of the maze and the gate, may not open anything but the body's ability to accumulate and to disperse, to be near and far, here and there. Memory, presence and imagination fold and run together. I was looking for gaps to step through, for ways both forward and back.' — Jen Crawford