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Mumia Abu-Jamal
Kathy Acker
Erje Ayden
Jean Baudrillard
Barbara Barg
Bernadette Corporation
Dhoruba Bin Wahad
William Burroughs
Pierre Clastres
Maurice G. Dantec
Gilles Deleuze
Jane DeLynn
Tony Duvert
Shulamith Firestone
Bob Flanagan
Michel Foucault
Eldon Garnet
Rainer Ganahl
Veronica Gonzalez
Félix Guattari
Amira Hass
Fanny Howe
Luce Irigaray
Alain Joxe
Liz Kotz
Chris Kraus
Julia Kristeva
Jurg Laederach
Sylvère Lotringer
Jean-François Lyotard
Christian Marazzi
Cookie Müeller
Heiner Müller
Eileen Myles
François Peraldi
David Rattray
Gerald Raunig
Suely Rolnik
Ann Rower
Assata Shakur
Michelle Tea
Lynne Tillman
Masha Tupitsyn
Paul Virilio
Paolo Virno
Mark von Schlegell
David Wojnarowicz
Heather Woodbury
Nina Zivancevic
Nina Zivancevic

Inside & Out of Byzantium

I translate the names of the disappeared, the killed and the missing, but I translate them slowly. That is, I vomit once after every five names.

Nina Zivancevic, a prominent Serbian poet, scholar, and translator, lived in lower Manhattan prior to the outbreak of the war in Sarajevo in 1992. Zivancevic introduced the work of Allan Ginsberg, Kathy Acker, and Charles Bernstein to East European readers, and her polyglot sensibility is highly informed by her immersion in the downtown New York art and literary world of the 1980s. In this, her first book of fiction written in English, Zivancevic's distant outsider stance as a cosmopolitan New York intellectual is shaken and inexorably transformed with the onset of the war. Faced with the complete blockade of information in the West about the situation in her country, she has no choice but to become actively involved in its comprehension, but without promoting the cause of a particular party or faction. Inside and Out of Byzantium is a remarkably visceral and powerful literary response to a state of permanent war.

"Inside and Out of Byzantium includes insight into the often absurd adventures of the global citizen. From continent to continent, country to country, from one hapless event to the next, Zivancevic observes, collects and recollects. What strikes her most is not the difference between nations and cultures, but the underlying similarity of people and places."

–Dawn-Michelle Baude, Free Voice, Paris


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