The Field of Access: Perceptual Misalignment and Mediated Presence in Modernist Narrative and Archaic Greek Poetics develops a unified theory of textual presence across two historically distant but structurally comparable domains: modernist narrative and archaic Greek poetics. The essay argues that presence is not an immediate datum, nor the simple expression of a self-present subject, but an effect produced through mediation. At the center of the argument is the concept of perceptual misalignment, defined as the condition in which, within a field of access, an index of presence makes something present without fully coinciding with the subject, source, support, body, place, or occasion that appears to guarantee it. In modernist prose, this non-coincidence appears primarily through the pressure of narrative form, syntax, rhythm, duration, and focalization. In archaic Greek poetics, it emerges through the distributed interaction of voice, body, gesture, object, place, inscription, memory, performance, and reception. The essay distinguishes between two theoretical dominants: the field of force, associated with modernist narrative and the energetic pressure of the sentence, and the field of access, associated with archaic Greek poetry, inscription, epigram, and performance. Through readings of Faulkner, Homer, Sappho, Pindar, Theognis, Nestor’s Cup, and the Midas epigram, the essay shows how literary presence is produced not through full possession or stable subjective control, but through partial access, displacement, recurrence, and non-coincidence. The central claim is that textual presence remains active precisely because it is mediated. What appears in literature does not simply stand before a perceiving self; it becomes accessible through a field of relations. In this sense, the essay proposes a theory of presence without possession.
Sandra Voss (Fri,) studied this question.