Conjunctions: 81 / Numina: The Enchantment Issue

Fall 2023

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Freesias
Aimee Bender

Berlin
Han Ong

Architectures of Emptiness
Arthur Sze

Autopoiesis & The Birds of Infinite Repair
Meredith Stricker

The Visible World
Alyssa Pelish

Codex of the Insane, with drawings by ET BER Warlikowska
Katarzyna Szuster-Tardi and Bronka Nowicka

Enter the Whirlwind
James Morrow

Three Hell Poems
Shane McCrae

Between the Edge and Center
Mark Irwin

Lost in America
Julia Alvarez

The Earth, Our ReliquaryConfessions of a Pilferer
Melissa Pritchard

A Monster Made of All My Dreams
Laird Hunt

The Greens, the Birds, the Speech, the Dance, the Silence
Jessica Reed

Song of the Andoumboulou: 356
Nathaniel Mackey

Nine Poems
Martha Ronk

 Of Fairy Tales
Cristina Campo and Translated by Alex Andriesse

Changeling
Nina Shope

Cave Friend
Brian Conn

Second Turning
Andrew Ervin

The Ancestors Conduct an Ethnographyof Earth
Heather Altfeld

The Creation [370 CE]
Eliot Weinberger

Eleven Cameos
Laynie Browne

Lola, Europa
Edie Meidav

Two Poems
Nancy Kuhl and Karla Kelsey

Magic Garments
Kyoko Mori

The Arrival
Michael Ives

Vale of the White Horse
Madeline Kearin

Entanglement
Ben Tufnell

The Rest Pavilion
Amparo Dávila, Translated by Matthew Gleeson and Translated by Audrey Harris

The Stones
Brian Evenson

Description

Conjunctions: 81, Numina: The Enchantment Issue

Bradford Morrow

A stone, a tree, a river, a mountain, the moon and stars. Humans have from the beginning lived in a natural world populated with objects. We have named them all, as is our penchant. We’ve respected and engaged them and, by turn, ignored or destroyed them. Wave after wave of our ancestors, however, have looked upon these everyday material phenomena not as dully inanimate, but enchanted, inspirited, numinous—having powers in potentia that are beyond analytic understanding.

Numen inest, Ovid wrote in Fasti. Which is to say that the world, to those who observe differently, is a place animated by consciousness outside the human sphere, one that’s full of spirits, daemons, revenants, fairies, gods sinister and benign. For these observers, the world is less a post-Cartesian realm measured in zeroes and ones than one of unabashed enchantment that has nothing to do with sociological primitivism or organized religion. In such a world, “the sacred tree, the sacred stone are not adored as stone or tree,” as Mircea Eliade noted. Instead, they’re venerated as“hierophanies,” entities that are wholly other, the ganz andere.

This fall, Numina: The Enchantment Issue will explore the idea that the material world of which we’re an infinitesimal part is inhabited by consciousness beyond our ken. For example, trees, we are now beginning to realize, communicate with each other through complex mycorrhizal networks. As such, forests can reasonably be understood to be carrying on conversations of their own. Who knows but that they are out there naming us, just as we named them. And what of secular relics like lucky dice, Ouija boards, and rabbits’ feet? What of Sviatoslav Richter’s plastic lobster?

Contributors will include Shane McCrae, Melissa Pritchard, Aimee Bender, Han Ong, Arthur Sze, Julia Alvarez, Laird Hunt, Eliot Weinberger, Kyoko Mori, Amparo Dávila, and many others.