• Complain

Chris Kraus - I Love Dick

Here you can read online Chris Kraus - I Love Dick full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: London, year: 2015, publisher: Tuskar Rock Press, genre: Prose. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Chris Kraus I Love Dick
  • Book:
    I Love Dick
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    Tuskar Rock Press
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2015
  • City:
    London
  • ISBN:
    978-1-78283-254-6
  • Rating:
    5 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 100
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

I Love Dick: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "I Love Dick" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

In I Love Dick, Chris Kraus, author of Aliens & Anorexia, Torpor, and Video Green, boldly tears away the veil that separates fiction from reality and privacy from self-expression. Its no wonder that upon its publication in 1997, I Love Dick instantly elicited violent controversies and attracted a host of passionate admirers. The story is gripping enough: in 1994 a married failed independent filmmaker who is about to turn forty falls in love with a well-known art and culture theorist named Dick and endeavors to seduce him with the help of her husband, a defiantly unconventional French academic with whom she hasnt had sex in a very long time. But when the theorist refuses to answer her letters, husband and wife continue the correspondence for each other instead, imagining the fling the wife wishes to have with Dick. What follows is a breathless pursuit that takes the woman across America and away from her husband and far beyond her original infatuation into a discovery of the transformative power of first-person narrative. I Love Dick is a manifesto for a new kind of feminist who isnt afraid to burn through her own narcissism in order to assume responsibility for herself and for the injustice in the world, and its a book you wont put down until the authors final, heroic acts of self-revelation and transformation.

Chris Kraus: author's other books


Who wrote I Love Dick? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

I Love Dick — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "I Love Dick" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Chris Kraus

I LOVE DICK

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I want to thank the following people who helped with their encouragement and conversation: Romy Ashby, Jim Fletcher, Carol Irving, John Kelsey, Ann Rower and Yvonne Shafir.

Thanks also to Eryk Kvam for legal counsel, Catherine Brennan, Justin Cavin and Andrew Berardini for proofreading and fact-checking, editors Ken Jordan and Jim Fletcher, Marsie Scharlatt for insights and information on the misdiagnosis of schizophrenia; and Sylvre Lotringer as always for everything.

PART 1: SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE

December 3, 1994

Chris Kraus, a 39-year-old experimental filmmaker and Sylvre Lotringer, a 56-year-old college professor from New York, have dinner with Dick , a friendly acquaintance of Sylvres, at a sushi bar in Pasadena. Dick is an English cultural critic whos recently relocated from Melbourne to Los Angeles. Chris and Sylvre have spent Sylvres sabbatical at a cabin in Crestline, a small town in the San Bernardino Mountains some 90 minutes from Los Angeles. Since Sylvre begins teaching again in January, they will soon be returning to New York. Over dinner the two men discuss recent trends in postmodern critical theory and Chris, who is no intellectual, notices Dick making continual eye contact with her. Dicks attention makes her feel powerful, and when the check comes she takes out her Diners Club card. Please, she says. Let me pay. The radio predicts snow on the San Bernardino highway. Dick generously invites them both to spend the night at his home in the Antelope Valley desert, some 30 miles away.

Chris wants to separate herself from her coupleness, so she sells Sylvre on the thrill of riding in Dicks magnificent vintage Thunderbird convertible. Sylvre, who doesnt know a T-bird from a hummingbird and doesnt care, agrees, bemused. Done. Dick gives her copious, concerned directions. Dont worry, she interrupts, flashing hair and smiles, Ill tail you. And she does. Slightly buzzed and keeping the accelerator of her pickup truck steady, shes reminded of a performance she did called Car Chase at the St. Marks Poetry Project in New York when she was 23. She and her friend Liza Martin had tailed the steelily good-looking driver of a Porsche all the way through Connecticut on Highway 95. Finally hed pulled over to a rest stop, but when Liza and Chris got out he drove off. The performance ended with Liza accidentally-but-really stabbing Chris hand onstage with a kitchen knife. Blood flowed, and everyone found Liza dazzlingly sexy and dangerous and beautiful. Liza, belly popping out of a fuzzy midriff top, fish-net legs tearing up against her green vinyl miniskirt as she rocked back to show her crotch, looked like the cheapest kind of whore. A star is born. No one at the show that night had found Chris pale anemic looks and piercing gaze remotely endearing. Could anyone? It was a question thatd temporarily been shelved. But now it was a whole new world. The request line on 92.3 The Beat was thumping, Post-Riot Los Angeles, a city strung on fiber optic nerves. Dicks Thunderbird was always somewhere in her line of sight, the two vehicles strung invisibly together across the concrete riverbed of highway, like John Donnes eyeballs. And this time Chris was alone.

Back at Dicks, the night unfolds like the boozy Christmas Eve in Eric Rohmers film My Night At Mauds. Chris notices that Dick is flirting with her, his vast intelligence straining beyond the po-mo rhetoric and words to evince some essential loneliness that only she and he can share. Chris giddily responds. At 2 a.m., Dick plays them a video of himself dressed as Johnny Cash commissioned by English public television. Hes talking about earthquakes and upheaval and his restless longing for a place called home. Chris response to Dicks video, though she does not articulate it at the time, is complex. As an artist she finds Dicks work hopelessly naive, yet she is a lover of certain kinds of bad art, art which offers a transparency into the hopes and desires of the person who made it. Bad art makes the viewer much more active. (Years later Chris would realize that her fondness for bad art is exactly like Jane Eyres attraction to Rochester, a mean horse-faced junky: bad characters invite invention.) But Chris keeps these thoughts to herself. Because she does not express herself in theoretical language, no one expects too much from her and she is used to tripping out on layers of complexity in total silence. Chris unarticulated double-flip on Dicks video draws her even closer to him. She dreams about him all night long. But when Chris and Sylvre wake up on the sofabed the next morning, Dick is gone.

December 4, 1994: 10 a.m.

Sylvre and Chris leave Dicks house, reluctantly, alone that morning. Chris rises to the challenge of extemporizing the Thank You Note, which must be left behind. She and Sylvre have breakfast at the Antelope IHOP. Because they are no longer having sex, the two maintain their intimacy via deconstruction: i.e., they tell each other everything. Chris tells Sylvre how she believes that she and Dick have just experienced a Conceptual Fuck. His disappearance in the morning clinches it, and invests it with a subcultural subtext she and Dick both share: shes reminded of all the fuzzy one-time fucks shes had with men whore out the door before her eyes are open. She recites a poem by Barbara Barg on this subject to Sylvre:

What do you do with a Kerouac
But go back and back to the sack
with Jack
How do you know when Jack
has come?
You look on your pillow and
Jack is gone

And then there was the message on Dicks answerphone. When they came into the house, Dick took his coat off, poured them drinks and hit the Play button. The voice of a very young, very Californian woman came on:

Hi Dick, thiss Kyla. Dick, IIm sorry to keep calling you at home, and now Ive got your answering machine and, and I just wanted to say Im sorry how things didnt work out the other night, andI know its not your fault, but I guess all I really wanted was just to thank you for being such a nice person

Now Im totally embarrassed, Dick mumbled charmingly, opening the vodka. Dick is 46 years old. Does this message mean hes lost? And, if Dick is lost, could he be saved by entering a conceptual romance with Chris? Was the conceptual fuck merely the first step? For the next few hours, Sylvre and Chris discuss this.

December 4, 1994: 8 p.m.

Back in Crestline, Chris cant stop thinking about last night with Dick. So she starts to write a story about it, called Abstract Romanticism. Its the first story shes written in five years.

It started in the restaurant, she begins. It was the beginning of the evening and we were all laughing a bit too much.

She addresses this story, intermittently, to David Rattray because shes convinced that Davids ghost had been with her last night for the car ride, pushing her pickup truck further all the way up Highway 5. Chris, Davids ghost and the truck had merged into a single unit moving forward.

Last night I felt, she wrote to Davids ghost, like I do at times when things seem to open onto new vistas of excitementthat you were here: floating dense beside me, set someplace between my left ear and my shoulder, compressed like thought.

She thought about David all the time. It was uncanny how Dick had said somewhere in last nights boozy conversation, as if hed read her mind, how much he admired Davids book. David Rattray had been a reckless adventurer and a genius and a moralist, indulging in the most improbable infatuations nearly until the moment of his death at age 57. And now Chris felt Davids ghost pushing her to understand infatuation, how the loved person can become a holding pattern for all the tattered ends of memory, experience and thought youve ever had. So she started to describe Dicks face, pale and mobile, good bones, reddish hair and deepset eyes. Writing, Chris held his face in her mind, and then the telephone rang and it was Dick.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «I Love Dick»

Look at similar books to I Love Dick. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «I Love Dick»

Discussion, reviews of the book I Love Dick and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.