Abstract

ABSTRACT Small Pleasures is an extract from a work of critical autobiography in progress. It explores the theme of ‘animating interior worlds’ through the body, gender, genealogy and culture. This work pulls focus to smallness and interiority in everyday acts of living, remembering and relating in contemporary Sydney and Kuala Lumpur delimited by trajectories of work, health and pleasure, or their obverse. Using, as a meditation, George Perec’s notions of the infra-ordinary—‘that which we generally don’t notice, which doesn’t call attention to itself, which is of no importance’—and the endotic, described as a tool to ‘rescue astonishment from the forgotten obvious’ (Lorenzo Sandoval, The Endotic Institute), this work endeavours to ‘read and listen to immanent local traces’ as an approach to understanding larger global complexities that may impact upon a narrating body: experiences of race, migration, ‘women’s business’, illness, speaking and writing. In this essay, I attempt to demonstrate the use of critical autobiography, pathography and autoethnographic processes as a hybrid methodology that may prove fruitful for interrogating contested relationships between a narrator and their own body, the body's history (and memory) of place/displacement/emplacement, and the fluid and ambiguous relationships of that body with surrounding cultural landscapes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call