No Archive Will Restore You

Paperback, 118 pages

Published by Punctum Books.

ISBN:
978-1-947447-85-1
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OCLC Number:
1076912030

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5 stars (1 review)

At once memoir, theory, poetic prose, and fragment, No Archive Will Restore You is a feverish meditation on the body. Departing from Antonio Gramsci's summons to compile an inventory of the historical traces left in each of us, Singh engages with both the impossibility and urgent necessity of crafting an archive of the body. Through reveries on the enduring legacies of pain, desire, sexuality, race, and identity, she asks us to sense and feel what we have been trained to disavow, to re-member the body as more than itself. Why this desire for a body archive, for an assembly of history's traces deposited in me? (I worry over how to describe it, how to frame it without sounding banal or bafflingly idiosyncratic.) The body archive is an attunement, a hopeful gathering, an act of love against the foreclosures of reason. It is a way of knowing the body-self as a …

2 editions

Review of 'No Archive Will Restore You' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

c.w. basically everything - trauma, disordered eating, racism, queerphobia, misogyny

the body is the archive, because it is always imperfect and ever changing. And yet it holds onto everything.

A quote:

"I become ever more preoccupied with this notion of transformative touch between friends. With contact that cannot be reduced to the normative cultural paradigms – sexual and parental – of intimate touch. What kinds of touch live beyond these paradigms, making up dissenting communities? The touch I desire most intensely is the touch of the friend that folds me into collective alterity, that feels and shapes me as an anti-normative social body. A misfit thing held and felt by other misfit things."