New Books Network

Sarah Dowling, "Here Is a Figure: Grounding Literary Form" (Northwestern UP, 2025)

Jan 13, 2026
Sarah Dowling, a literary critic and poet from the University of Toronto, dives into her new book, exploring the prevalence of recumbent figures in contemporary literature and art. She discusses how these prone characters challenge our understanding of subjectivity and activism. Dowling highlights connections to feminist and decolonial thought, emphasizing the political weight of lying-down figures. Her conversation touches on the importance of grounded scholarship, interdisciplinary approaches, and the role of criticism as advocacy in cultural discourse.
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INSIGHT

Recumbency As A Repeating Pattern

  • Recumbent figures recur across recent literature and art as a pattern rather than a single form.
  • They reorient attention from upright subjectivity to the material and historical ground beneath bodies.
ANECDOTE

Classroom Sparked The Pattern

  • Teaching in an MFA program exposed Sarah Dowling to many new writers who used lying-down figures.
  • Encounters with authors like Tisa Bryant and Renee Gladman seeded the project's discovery of the pattern.
INSIGHT

Uprightness Carries Political Weight

  • Upright posture carries moral and political meanings tied to eugenics, militarism, and racial ascendancy.
  • Recumbent figures counterpose those meanings and open ethical alternatives that emphasize dependency and situatedness.
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