The Naked Eye (New Directions Paperbook)

 
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Paperback Book, 256 pages

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Product Description

An avant-garde poet, Yoko Tawada writes a very experimental novel about a young Vietnamese girl is invited to a youth conference in East Berlin. While there she is kidnapped but manages to escape her abductor and flees to Paris where she is completely alone, broke. There she looses herself in Catherine Deneuve films while her real adventures begin. A feminist, Tawada’s work is all about alienation and reinvention.

Product Details

  • Media: Paperback Book, 256 pages
  • Publisher: New Directions (May 26, 2009)
  • ISBN-10: 0811217396
  • ISBN-13: 9780811217392
  • Dimensions: 5 x 6.8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.45 lbs
  • Note: Some of this information came from Amazon.com

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Customer Reviews

  • Rating The Naked Eye  Aug 1, 2009 

    In Yoko Tawada's The Naked Eye--translated from German earlier this year--a Vietnamese student travels to East Berlin to give a lecture on "Vietnam As a Victim of American Imperialism," only to be smuggled against her will to the other side of the Iron Curtain. She then tries to catch a train to Moscow but instead finds herself in Paris, alone and alienated by language, ideology, and ethnicity. Throughout all of these displacements, the student grows increasingly obsessed with Catherine Deneuve (to whom she refers throughout the novel in the second person), taking refuge in the darkness of half-empty cinemas to watch the actress's films over and over again. Tawada's novel doesn't hesitate to explore complex issues of identity and representation in an image-saturated world, but what has stayed with me the most is how her prose beautifully embodies her young character's fragile and preoccupied state of mind.
    -From Guernica web magazine

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