
text=sara sutterlin and emily stewart

text=sara sutterlin and emily stewart
Claire Wolfteich, “Attention or Destruction: Simone Weil and the Paradox of the Eucharist,” The Journal of Religion 81, no. 3 (Jul., 2001)
“My value and security may come to depend entirely on my needs and wants being met by a particular kind of human relationship—by a variety of what we usually call human love…. I may manipulate or tyrannize over someone else, deny their right to be themselves or to have interests other than my supposed interests, and so do profound injury to them…. Weil’s claim is that this is endemic in ordinary human relations. If I love someone as a particular individual, this means that their particularity is attractive to me. These features of their reality meet or gratify my expectations, they are pleasing to my standards; my selection of them as objects of love means that I have found reason to ignore or discount other aspects of their reality and to withhold love from other individuals not possessed of the relevant desirable features. Thus my love of the individual as individual is necessarily an attempt to"cannibalize" them, to bring them into my world on my terms”.
—Rowan Williams, “The Necessary Non-Existence of God,” in Simone Weil’s Philosophy of Culture, ed. R. Bell
Happy Belated V Day from me to you and also to me
Ai
Dodie Bellamy from Low Culture
me on Valentine’s Day 2015 with a pre-frosted heart, ripe for devouring
Kathy Acker from Empire of the Senseless
Helene Cixous from The Love of the Wolf

He just knows that not mating is the final bulwark between him and death.
happy v day



judy chicago

Louise Gluck from Meadowlands

james joyce, ulysses