This essay proposes a theory of textual presence by distinguishing between two related but historically and formally different concepts: the field of force and the field of access. The field of force describes the modernist sentence as an energetic unit in which syntax, rhythm, duration, focalization, and semantic density generate perceptual pressure. Through a micro-reading of the opening of William Faulkner’s Light in August, the essay shows how even a minimal sentence such as “She is walking up the road” can function as a vector of movement, duration, and unstable localization. The field of access describes how archaic Greek poetry and inscribed texts organize presence through relations among voice, object, support, place, performance, memory, and reception. This concept is developed through a reading of Nestor’s Cup, where the first-person inscription distributes voice among the material object, the reader or performer, the symposium, heroic memory, and the body of the drinker. The central argument is that both fields produce presence through non-coincidence. In modernism, presence emerges as internal pressure within the sentence; in archaic poetry, it emerges as partial access within a scene of reception. The shared logic is perceptual misalignment: the gap between an index that demands phenomenological localization and a textual or situational field that renders such localization unstable, excessive, or only partially available.
Sandra Voss (Thu,) studied this question.