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PØTENTIAL LIVES An Extract

PØTENTIAL LIVES An Extract Camille de Toledo Translated by Ann Jefferson A far-off place, a fable, and a few adjustments In an apartment on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, between three old factories, a father and a son sit embracing. The hand belonging to the father pats the son on the back to reassure him, and in return the son pats his father's shoulder with his own little hand. The son is not old enough to know, or to learn. He is unaware of the schemes being hatched in the world outside, the plots and the intrigues. He presses close against his father, just presses, obliging him to slow down. He takes his father away from life's demands, obliges him to quiet. No, you won't go to work, the child seems to say as he clasps him close, I need you, I don't want you to go. But which of them is comforting the other? It's a question the father asks himself, then thinks of the hole into which the gestures of love are poured as the years go by. He pats. Pat, pat, pat. His son, snuggled against him, pats him in return. They could remain like this, each pressed against http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Common Knowledge Duke University Press

PØTENTIAL LIVES An Extract

Common Knowledge , Volume 20 (2) – Mar 20, 2014

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Publisher
Duke University Press
Copyright
Copyright © Duke Univ Press
ISSN
0961-754X
eISSN
1538-4578
DOI
10.1215/0961754X-2422953
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Camille de Toledo Translated by Ann Jefferson A far-off place, a fable, and a few adjustments In an apartment on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, between three old factories, a father and a son sit embracing. The hand belonging to the father pats the son on the back to reassure him, and in return the son pats his father's shoulder with his own little hand. The son is not old enough to know, or to learn. He is unaware of the schemes being hatched in the world outside, the plots and the intrigues. He presses close against his father, just presses, obliging him to slow down. He takes his father away from life's demands, obliges him to quiet. No, you won't go to work, the child seems to say as he clasps him close, I need you, I don't want you to go. But which of them is comforting the other? It's a question the father asks himself, then thinks of the hole into which the gestures of love are poured as the years go by. He pats. Pat, pat, pat. His son, snuggled against him, pats him in return. They could remain like this, each pressed against

Journal

Common KnowledgeDuke University Press

Published: Mar 20, 2014

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