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Dan Fox

Limbo

In a world that demands faith in progress and growth, Limbo is a companion for the stuck, the isolated, delayed, stranded and those in the dark. Fusing memoir with a meditation on creative block and a cultural history of limbo, Dan Fox considers the role that fallow periods and states of inbetween play in art and life. Limbo is an essay about getting by when you can’t get along, employing a cast of artists, ghosts and sailors — including the author’s older brother who, in 1985, left England for good to sail the world — to reflect on the creative, emotional and political consequences of being stuck, and its opposites. From the Headington Shark to radical behavioural experiments, from life aboard a container ship to Sun Ra’s cosmology, Limbo argues that there can be no growth without stagnancy, no movement without inactivity, and no progress without refusal.

‘Reading Fox is like watching a gymnast perform a floor routine. He vaults and tumbles ideas and arguments, seamlessly incorporating criticism, pop culture, and stories from his own life, and sticks every landing.’ — Los Angeles Review of Books
112 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2018
Publication year
2018

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  • Rua Haszard Morris (haszari)shared an impression5 years ago
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Quotes

  • Sandra Viviana Chisaca Leivahas quoted4 months ago
    and a contemporary figure, the warrior-sultan Saladin, widely admired by the Crusader armies who fought him.

    Limbus
  • Sandra Viviana Chisaca Leivahas quoted4 months ago
    ¶ For medieval Catholic theologians, limbo – often conflated with purgatory, an overheated waiting room processing souls with chequered pasts – was a place for the church to dump bodies that did not carry the correct paperwork. (In a letter written to his fictional friend Malcolm, C. S. Lewis described purgatory as an astringent mouthwash to be drunk after ‘the tooth of life is drawn and I am “coming round.”’) The name applied to two zones: limbus patrum (Limbo of the Fathers), and limbus infantum (Limbo of Infants). Limbo of the Fathers existed on the fringes of Hell and was a place reserved for men who had died before Jesus Christ lived. Where the old prophets waited in unfinished happiness was a restricted ward, but not a penal confinement. In his fifteenth-century painting Christ in Limbo Fra Angelico depicted limbo as a dark and cool cave. A simple, classical arch has been carved at its mouth, as if the entrance to a secret system of passages drilled deep inside a mountain. A century later, a follower of Hieronymous Bosch dumped limbo on the bank of the River Styx, beneath an acrid smoke-filled sky – souls huddled together beneath the entrance to a light-filled tunnel where Christ is to rescue them. In the fourth canto of his Inferno, Dante Alighieri – writing in exile from his home town of Florence – describes limbo as a twilight grove where those who were without sin but who had ‘lived before the Christian age’ waited patiently until Christ descended to the underworld for the Harrowing of Hell, liberating them to enter Heaven. ‘Here in the dark (where only hearing told),’ writes Dante, ‘there were no tears, no weeping, only sighs / that caused a trembling in the eternal air – / sighs drawn from sorrowing, although no pain.’ Gustave Doré, illustrating The Divine Comedy in the 1860s, stayed close to Dante’s vision, depicting limbo as woodland frozen in crisp, monochrome moonlight. Dante’s guide, Virgil, points out Old Testament saints: Abel, Noah, Abraham, David, Rachel. Walking amongst the trees they see the pagans Homer, Horace, Ovid and Lucan, amongst others. On a ‘verdant lawn’ Dante and Virgil meet the Greeks – Socrates, Plato, Euclid, Hippocrates, Zeno – the Muslim philosophers Avicenna and Averro
  • Sandra Viviana Chisaca Leivahas quoted4 months ago
    Those who live dangerously, taunting death by courting misadventure through drugs or the adrenaline highs of extreme sports. The post-war figure of the artist whose integrity hinges on a refusal to sell out to the mainstream. But in hinterland new centres are built: the adoptive family or radical commune, say, who have rejected conventional structures of community in search of different models of kinship. Given time, the centre will expand and eventually swallow the edgelands. What to one generation’s eyes seems too extreme – too fringe or avant-garde – will with slow, tectonic inevitability, become accepted into the canon, forming mainstream attitude, or even paragon conservatism.

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