Moyra Davey
Born
Toronto, Canada
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Index Cards: Selected Essays
4 editions
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published
2020
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Mother Reader: Essential Writings on Motherhood
13 editions
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published
2001
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Long Life Cool White: Photographs and Essays
by
2 editions
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published
2008
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Moyra Davey: Burn the Diaries
by
2 editions
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published
2014
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The Problem of Reading
2 editions
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published
2003
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Moyra Davey: Les Goddesses/Hemlock Forest
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Moyra Davey: I Confess
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I'm Your Fan
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Quema los diarios
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Gold Dumps and Ant Hills
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“Dipping into the archive is always an interesting, if sometimes unsettling, proposition. It often begins with anxiety, with the fear that the thing you want won't surface. But ultimately the process is a little like tapping into the unconscious, and can bring with it the ambivalent gratification of rediscovering forgotten selves.
Rather than making new pictures why can't I just recycle some of these old ones? Claim "found" photographs from among my boxes? And have this gesture signify "resistance to further production/consumption"? (96)”
― Long Life Cool White: Photographs and Essays
Rather than making new pictures why can't I just recycle some of these old ones? Claim "found" photographs from among my boxes? And have this gesture signify "resistance to further production/consumption"? (96)”
― Long Life Cool White: Photographs and Essays
“I am developing new coping mechanisms for lost words and lost negatives, as here for instance: compensate by describing the episode instead. When something is lost, redirect energy, follow the derivé, the chance and flow of what life tosses us, and make something new instead.
Remember that I'm often struck by certain passages of descriptive writing, writing that is not about driving home a point but about providing detail, background, setting the scene (it's tempting to call this the stadium of writing). It has a "something from nothing" quality: a pleasurable experience has been had, and no one has paid a price. Remember that writing does not have to be torture (107).”
― Long Life Cool White: Photographs and Essays
Remember that I'm often struck by certain passages of descriptive writing, writing that is not about driving home a point but about providing detail, background, setting the scene (it's tempting to call this the stadium of writing). It has a "something from nothing" quality: a pleasurable experience has been had, and no one has paid a price. Remember that writing does not have to be torture (107).”
― Long Life Cool White: Photographs and Essays
“The trouble is you can only “live” once you’ve filmed. That feeling of freedom and release comes only after you’ve worked very hard for it. Years after making Hotel Monterey, you remembered the feeling: “I can breathe, I’m really a filmmaker.”
― Index Cards
― Index Cards
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