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Shaking a Leg: Collected Journalism and Writings PDF

457 Pages·1998·4.01 MB·English
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Shaking a Leg COLLECTED WRITINGS ANGELA CARTER With an Introduction by Joan Smith Edited by Jenny Uglow Research Assistant Charlotte Crofts Back Cover: "An electrifying intellectual autobiography, with all the narrative expanse, drama, outrage, and high comedy of the author's fiction. Angela Carter is revealed here, anew, as one or the most important thinkers of twentieth-century world literature -- and one of its most pungent voices." -- Rick Moody One of contemporary literature's most original and affecting fiction writers, Angela Carter also wrote brilliant nonfiction. Shaking a Leg comprises the best of her essays and criticism, much of it collected for the first time. Carter's acute observations are spiked with her piercing matter-of-factness, her devastating wit, her penchant for mockery, and her passion for the absurd. Whether discussing films or food, feminism or fantasy, science fiction or sex, Carter consistently explores new territories and overturns old ideas. No cultural icon escapes her scrutiny; as in her fiction, Carter offers glorious evidence of the transforming power of the imagination. From delightfully wicked commentaries on Gone With the Wind, a Japanese fertility festival, and fellow writers, including Lawrence, Lovecraft, Borges, and Burroughs, to enchanting personal essays, Carter shares her thoughts and herself with glee. "What a wonderful collection -- sharp, funny, too decent for sarcasm but great wit and humanity, an unusual combination. But it makes us miss her, miss laughing with her, that real, intelligent, tough writing woman." -- Grace Paley "Angela Carter is a dazzling, unflinching, mordant observer of contemporary appetites, an ironist and a tragedian of twentieth-century cultural effects, a dazzling conjuror with language and with symbols, a writer whose originality of eye and mind never fails to divert, to illuminate, to change her readers' understanding and quicken our wits." -- Marina Warner PENGUIN BOOKS Published by the Penguin Group Penguin Putnam Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A. Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 STZ, England Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Ringwood, Victoria, Australia Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2 Penguin Books (N.Z.) Ltd, 182-190 Wairau Road, Auckland 10, New Zealand Penguin India, 210 Chiranjiv Tower, 43 Nehru Place, New Delhi 11009, India Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England First published in Great Britain by Chatto & Windus Limited 1997 Published in Penguin Books 1998 1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2 Copyright © the Estate of Angela Carter, 1997 Introduction copyright © Joan Smith, 1997 All rights reserved Introduction to Wayward Girls & Wicked Women edited by Angela Carter. Copyright © Angela Carter, 1986. Reprinted by permission of Penguin Books, a member of Penguin Putnam Inc. Information about the original publication of the selections contained herein appears in the chronology starting on page 609. ISBN 0 14 02.7695 5 (CIP data available) Printed in the United States of America Set in Bembo Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Contents Editor's note Introduction by Joan Smith SELF The Mother Lode My Father's House Sugar Daddy Notes from a Maternity Ward Fools Are My Theme Notes from the Front Line Anger in a Black Landscape BODY LANGUAGES Fleshly Matters Lovely Linda Fat Is Ugly A Well-Hung Hang-Up Health on the Brain Georges Bataille: Story of the Eye Edward Shorter: A History of Women's Bodies Eric Rhode: On Birth and Madness Food Fetishes The New Vegetarians Saucerer's Apprentice Jessica Kuper (ed.): The Anthropologist's Cookbook Barbara Tims (ed.): Food in Vogue Elizabeth David: English Bread and Yeast Cookery An Omelette and a Glass of Wine and Other Dishes Patience Gray: Honey from a Weed Dressing Up and Down Notes for a Theory of Sixties Style The Wound in the Face Trouser Protest Year of the Punk The Bridled Sweeties Ted Polhemus and Lynn Procter: Fashion and Anti-Fashion David Kunzle: Fashion and Fetishisms The Recession Style Lou Taylor: Mourning Dress Elizabeth Wilson: Adorned in Dreams Roland Barthes: The Fashion System Arthur Marwick: Beauty in History HOME AND AWAY What the Hell -- It's Home! Bradford: Industry as Artwork Fin de Siècle The Oss Has His Day Bath, Heritage City What the Hell -- It's Home! The Donnie Ferrets The Paris of the North D'You Mean South? Poets in a Landscape So There'll Always Be an England Masochism for the Masses Michael Moorcock: Mother London Iain Sinclair: Downriver Travelling My Maugham Award The Back of Beyond Triple Flavour Wet Dream City A Petrified Harvest Bread on Still Waters Munch and Antibiotics Constructing an Australia Japan Tokyo Pastoral People as Pictures Mishima's Toy Sword Once More into the Mangle Poor Butterfly Death in Japan A Fertility Festival Murasaki Shikibu: The Tale of Genji Ian Buruma: A Japanese Mirror Junichiro Tanizaki: Naomi Amerika Tom Wolfe That Arizona Home Snow-Belt America The Rise of the Preppies Anne Campbell: The Girls in the Gang Edmund White: The Beautiful Room Is Empty LOOKING Animalia At the Zoo Animals in the Nursery In the Bear Garden Little Lamb, Get Lost All Creatures Great and Small Song and Show Now Is the Time for Singing Bob Dylan on Tour A Busker (Retired) The Good Old Songs Giants' Playtime Wagner and the Mistral Fun Fairs Carlos Moore: Fela Fela Phyllis Rose: Jazz Cleopatra Screen and Dream Femmes Fatales Japanese Erotica Much, Much Stranger than Fiction Bertolucci: La Luna Hal Ashby: Being There The Draughtsman's Contract The Belle as Businessperson Jean-Luc Godard Robert Coover: A Night at the Movies Hollywood Barry Paris Louise Brooks In Pantoland The Granada, Tooting The Box Theatre of the Absurd Acting It Up on the Small Screen The Box Does Furnish a Room Monkey Business The Wonderful World of Cops Making Art Berthold Hinz: Art in the Third Reich Treasures of Ancient Nigeria Artists of the Tudor Court Pontus Hulten: The Arcimboldo Effect Three Women Artists Frida Kahlo STORIES AND TELLERS Tell Me A Story Jorge Luis Borges: An Introduction to English Literature The Hidden Child The Art of Horrorzines The Better to Eat You With An I for Truth Latin Rhythms Yashar Kemal: The Lords of Akchasaz William Burroughs: Ah Pook Is Here William Burroughs: The Western Lands The German Legends of the Brothers Grimm The Sweet Sell of Romance Robert Darnton: The Great Cat Massacre Irish Folk Tales, Arab Folktales Bruce Chatwin: The Songlines Through a Text Backwards: The Resurrection of the House of Usher Milorad Pavic: Dictionary of the Khazars Milorad Pavic: Landscape Painted with Tea Writers and Readers Lorenzo the Closet Queen The Life of Katherine Mansfield The Alchemy of the Word F. Scott Fitzgerald: The Great Gatsby Grace Paley: The Little Disturbances of Man and Enormous Changes at the Last Minute Colette Carol Ascher: Simone de Beauvoir D. H. Lawrence, Scholarship Boy Envoi: Bloomsday Alison's Giggle Trials of a Booker Judge J. G. Ballard Empire of the Sun The End: Reading South Africa Christina Stead Vladimir Nabokov: The Enchanter Peter Carey: Oscar and Lucinda Salman Rushdie: The Satanic Verses Love in a Cold Climate Colin Greenland: Michael Moorcock: Death Is No Obstacle Appendix: Introduction to Expletives Deleted Chronology of Journalism and Occasional Writings (1964-91) Editor's Note This volume contains a substantial selection of Angela Carter's journalism from the 1960s until her death. It cannot be comprehensive, but I hope that the chronology at the end of the book, which lists introductions as well as articles and reviews, will guide readers further. In arranging the contents, I have followed Angela's own lead in the earlier collections, Nothing Sacred (1982) and Expletives Deleted (1992), using categories to define and separate but also to tease and provoke. Inevitably, because her approach was so open and because she loved strange conjunctions and overlapping currents, many pieces could move happily between categories -- she put reviews into sections on countries, for example, insisting that books were a guide to perception and should not always be fenced into literary divisions. I have adopted her line and have also followed her in dividing the final section into "Stories and Tellers" and "Writers and Readers", since her interest in genre, storytelling, magic and the way people make "tales" out of ordinary lives, led her to see certain works in a different light to others. Within each section the pieces run in date order except where two reviews relate to the same author, when they appear together. The chronology has been compiled after wide-ranging research, first by Mark Bell and then by Charlotte Crofts, but it is still provisional and we hope that this volume will provide yet more leads. Several people have helped in the quest and have dug deep into their own files. We are particularly grateful to Paul Barker, former editor of New Society, who was an enormous help in the early stages of collecting material, and to William Scammell, the editor of Nonesuch Magazine at Bristol University, where Angela Carter's work first appeared. We would also like to thank Carmen Callil, Susannah Clapp, John Ellis, Kim Evans, Malcolm Edwards, Michael Moorcock, Deborah Rogers, David Pringle and Brian Stableford. And we all owe a debt to the various publications from which these marvellous pieces come and to the many editors and literary editors who -- as Angela herself said -- often accepted the most surprising things, "without batting an eyelid". Jenny Uglow, January 1997 Introduction The first time I read a book by Angela Carter, it had such an impact on me that I rushed off to the local library in search of more. Knowing little about this author I had discovered -- it was the late 1970s and novels like Nights at the Circus and Wise Children were a long way in the future -- I devoured everything I could find, delighted to find that one woman had produced work as diverse as The Bloody Chamber, her sly re-casting of traditional fairy-tales, and a thrilling polemic like The Sadeian Woman. I had just returned to live in London after a long absence and Carter's hugely original engagement with the Marquis de Sade sustained me through a rather lonely Christmas in a borrowed flat near Kew Gardens; I remember wandering through the steamy palm house, mulling over her argument about the pornographic imagination beneath dripping green fronds, then the shock of stepping outside into the sharp winter cold. I wouldn't say reality intervened at that point, more that I'd been so caught up in a mental dialogue with this woman I'd never met that I'd forgotten what time of year it was. Carter's ideas were like that, staying in your head long after you'd put down the printed page, even when you weren't absolutely sure you agreed with her -- a quality I don't want to describe as feminine, precisely, but which certainly struck me then (and again now, reading this collection of her journalism and shorter writings) as aeons away from the bombastic, know-it-all style of so much male discourse. One of the many things I like about Shaking A Leg, in fact, is the way in which the articles and reviews show Angela Carter's mind working, coming at a subject from different angles, changing its focus, trying out a thought and seeing where it goes. The result isn't tentative, far from it -- few authors have been so passionately engaged -- but it's a kind of writing which invites the reader to think, to argue back, to accost its creator with sentences beginning: "yes, but what about. . .?" From the very first pages of this book, which opens with Angela Carter's reflections on her family history, there is a sense of someone returning again and again to the same subject, seeing it from a different point of view. She has opinions but they are not set in stone; sometimes she pokes fun at her younger, more solemn self. You get the feeling that, by writing it down, she is trying to understand her background, a process which involves demolishing a few family fictions -- and, perhaps, one or two of her own. Some of her relatives, her father and her maternal grandmother for instance, emerge vividly and immediately from her prose. Her mother, a shadowy figure compared to these domestic colossi, is revealed more slowly as a figure in her own right -- and this gradual unveiling suggests, more powerfully than if it had been addressed directly, the uneasy relationship between the women of Angela Carter's generation and the one immediately before it. For she is in many senses a child of the 1960s, a decade which it has recently been fashionable to denigrate, and she lived through those extraordinary upheavals which amounted to a revolution in style, taste, politics -- in everything from superficially trivial issues like fashion, about which she writes brilliantly and very funnily, to weighty matters like class. That decade changed people's lives, mostly for the better in my view, but it also created a generation gap more profound, I suspect, than anything that had gone before. This was especially true for women and when Carter writes about her mother, she does not hesitate to acknowledge limited aspirations and missed opportunities. There is also a muted note of self-interrogation, as though she is forever asking herself, as have many of us whose lives were shaped by the great wave of feminism which came out of the 6os, "how do I come to be as I am?" What she was, in Carter's case, is difficult to define. Novels, short stories, radio plays, fairy-tales, polemic, journalism: the scope of her writing, in an era when authors tend to be

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Angela Carter died in 1992, but her novels, short story collections, and essays live on, attracting new generations of readers to her often dark, always quirky worldview. Perhaps best known for her fiction (Wise Children, Nights at the Circus, Burning Your Boats, Saints and Strangers, among other ti
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