Goatsong

£14.99

Spanning fifteen years of composition, Goatsong is the culmination of Giannisi’s vision of chimeric poetics: an evocative and ambitious polyphonic exploration of desire, ecology, myth and motherhood.

In stock

Six copies are currently available in store.
This title can be ordered for collection in store or for home delivery.
If you require more copies than we have available in the shop we can order these for you – this usually just takes a day or two, but we will confirm the expected timeframe when an order is placed.

SKU: 9781804271896 Category: Tags: , Publisher/imprint : Fitzcarraldo Editions
Page count : 300
Published on 6th November, 2025

Description

The ancient Greek word for tragedy (????????) is a compound of goat (??????) and song (???). In Phoebe Giannisi’s Goatsong, the seam that connects human and animal, myths and history, is the body.

In Giannisi’s language, life obeys myth. A man places a screaming cicada in his mouth, reminding us of a scene from Plato’s Phaedrus, where Socrates claims cicadas to have been humans who became entranced by the invention of singing, and didn’t stop to eat or drink. When the goddess Thetis dips her newborn son, Achilles, into the River Styx to protect all but his famous heel where her hand grips, we’re told ‘the place of the mother’s grip / is the mark of death.’ Adjacent to the mythical setting is the material, where the rumination of goats, their digestive cycle – chewing, swallowing, then recalling food back into the mouth to be reconsidered – begins after weaning, and is lain alongside how we think: ‘from the moment of separation / from the mother / they ruminate.’ In these lyric enactments, all is transformative and transformed; territories of land, the body and history are blurred, and nothing is still.

From Homer to Donna Haraway, Derrida to state archives, klephtic ballads and rebetiko, to Parmenides and Giannisi’s dog, Ivan, the many human and animal voices of Goatsong form an incantatory lyricism and layered engagement unique in literature.

Additional information

Dimensions 19.7 × 13.4 cm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Pages

Language

Edition
Dewey

Readership