Keys to the Archive: A Gathering of Old MenMain MenuAboutIntroductionKeyword EntriesTracesCreative responses to the archival collectionsThe CollectionsBibliographyDavid Squiresc613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674
Mathusala Redacted
1media/Mathusala Redacted jpeg_thumb.jpg2020-11-19T18:59:27+00:00Lauren Bedsole928cfa58c1ab3dbffdd93d8421e7eca140059c2e51An erasure poem based on the work of Ernest J. Gainesplain2020-11-19T18:59:27+00:00Lauren Bedsole928cfa58c1ab3dbffdd93d8421e7eca140059c2e
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1media/Dirt Road between Plantations.jpg2020-11-16T23:03:09+00:00Mathusala Redacted22image_header2021-06-01T21:23:19+00:00By Lauren Barker Bedsole
As I considered a topic for this redaction poem, I felt especially drawn to Mathu. Enslavers tried to take his life and his heritage, but Mathu proved to be a giant of a man, even according to those who enslaved him. The redaction aims to crystallize description of his personality while centering him as a character. The original draft features Mathu as the object of a bet; this redaction poem makes him an agent of his own history.
All right look at him sitting grinning with confidence A hundred A hundred a hundred against life my name is Ma th u bet? bet Jack you know something about this world I don’t know? It’s possible Jack you’re my witness you you picture him as a boy who named him Mathusala – Mathusala Jack Later he shortened it to Mathu Mathu is what he was all his life He was older and older grew up and fought to hit back Jack.
12020-11-16T16:26:57+00:00Traces13Creative responses to the archival collectionsvisual_path5612021-05-20T16:30:30+00:00The collections at the Gaines Center afford us an opportunity to study the development and composition of his novels. But doing that work at a distance, with limited access to the research materials, encouraged us to ask how else we might engage Gaines’s drafts other than recovering his writing process. What other forms of reading and writing might the collections elicit through digital remediation?
This series of creative entries offers a number of answers to that question. Partly inspired by Lisa Samuels and Jerome McGann’s experiments in “Deformance and Interpretation,” these textual “deformations” develop new perspectives on Gaines’s draft materials using procedural alterations that reorder, isolate, alter, or add to the document at hand. Some use redaction to draw out aspects of the original documents that require reader attention; some isolate particular words to break the linear order of prose lines into fractured, impressionistic utterances; others use draft materials as the starting point for original poetic expression.
In each case, these creative entries work toward reimagining Gaines’s unpublished writing and what it might mean for contemporary readers. As Samuels and McGann point out, among artists and poets, “interpretation regularly involves some kind of performative element” (46). Giving space to performative engagements with the archive in this project reminds us to continue reading Gaines with fresh eyes. Doing so reveals traces of the lives he preserved in his published writing at the same time it demonstrates how his legacy continues to inspire new approaches to representing South Louisiana.