Anne Carson

Shifting Perspective in Anne Carson’s Autobiography of Red

Shifting Perspective in Anne Carson’s Autobiography of Red

Carson’s novel is driven by unlatching being: her protagonist’s narration progresses from the self-absorption of childhood through adolescence and into the comparative wisdom of young adulthood. Carson shows this journey primarily through changes in the way that the outside world, and those who live in it, are observed.

Imagining the Anthropocene: Anne Carson’s “The Anthropology of Water”

Imagining the Anthropocene: Anne Carson’s “The Anthropology of Water”

Along the course of a rugged pilgrimage, Carson’s defined formal structure enables the logical leaps that keep the speaker in a constant state of new encounter. As her mind’s constellated meanderings undercut the journey’s unceasing forward motion, “The Anthropology of Water” erodes assumptions of linear progress.

Squad Books

Squad Books

Look, I’m not trying to be Internetty. But at the end of a year I’ve spent thinking a lot about friendship, I don’t want my last post to be another family tree. Instead, I want to write about books that are my friends. I want to write about the books that I’ve made into parts…

The Narrowed Divide: Of Stylists, Shape-Shifters, and Multiple Aesthetics

  Our collective understanding of how a story, poem, or essay should operate remains in constant flux; every sentence is a new description of language, every piece of writing, a new commentary on art. In this sense, any shared definition of storytelling is best left unresolved, unless we are to say a story is simply…