Don’t love as much as TES (bc of TES’s German expressionist influence), but Beatty really has a way of turning the body into something poetic. Here, I would say even more than in TES, Beatty shows us what it really is to submit yourself to someone or something—I guess because of the removal of a seeming other (human) subject it seems ‘more’ due to the somewhat need for abstraction?
Don’t love as much as TES (bc of TES’s German expressionist influence), but Beatty really has a way of turning the body into something poetic. Here, I would say even more than in TES, Beatty shows us what it really is to submit yourself to someone or something—I guess because of the removal of a seeming other (human) subject it seems ‘more’ due to the somewhat need for abstraction?