williams-deja-vu

September 20, 2024

When the occasion arose, she preferred to use the word pantomnesia, he the term déjà vu.

She argued that pantomnesia has Greek roots meaning “all” or “universal” — panto — and “mind” or “memory” — mnesia — and therefore is a more technically accurate term.

He suggested that she was a snob.

She said that déjà vu simply means “already seen” and refers specifically to visual experience, when there is so much, so very much more in experiencing the unfamiliar as familiar.

He reminded her that they had had this conversation before.

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Thought:

“I don’t read fiction for the story; I read it for the acts of language, for the feelingful feats of syntax, and if I don’t find any, I’ll move on. The fiction that interests me, the fiction that does me in, isn’t the kind that reports the world or embellishes it, but the kind that usurps the world entirely.”

Garielle Lutz

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