At 28, Julia Armfield is being hailed by many as one of the UK’s pre-eminent new literary voices. Longlisted for the Deborah Rogers literary award in 2018 and presented with the White Review short story prize soon after, her tales are both macabre and humane. Balancing a tone of cool detachment and gentle empathy, Armfield lays out an aesthetics inherited from the likes of Angela Carters 1970s fairytales, Kafka’s Metamorphosis and the annals of the horror genre; and while her tales demonstrate a comprehensive knowledge of the genre’s tropes and motifs, these elements are imbued with an empathic literary sensibility that pushes the potential of the form forward. The fantastic – sleepless phantoms, golems and werewolves – is used as a means of examining the complexities of the modern female’s relationships with others and the corporal. [read full interview]
David Cameron had inherited a party split by Europe; he did not know or care much about the older, underlying tension and started a bar-fight that ripped right across it. He ended up leaving behind him a party in at least four parts: Whig Remainers, grey-faced Establishment spectres (they produced Theresa May and are now led by Jeremy Hunt); idealistic, sometimes confusing Tory Remainers, of whom Rory Stewart is the most persuasive example; Whig Brexiteers, blithely ahistorical venture capitalists; and Tory Brexiteers, atavistic and excitable backwoodsmen. [read full essay]
Olivia Rosenthal, trans. Sophie Lewis, To Leave with the Reindeer
reviewed by Tony Messenger
In the era of instant social media attention, activism has reached new levels of prominence, with animal activism in particular finding increasing acceptance among the broader public. Groups such as PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), with over 6.5 million members worldwide, use shock tactics to garner support and further debate. But animal activism has yet to appear as an overarching theme in mainstream literature.
Enter Olivia Rosenthal’s first novel to appear in... [read more]
It is Joan Didion who writes that driving offers ‘a seductive unconnectedness,’ and Tara Jepsen who claims ‘Driving emphasizes that America is full of people with no sense of civic responsibility.’ Cars are certainly an apt metaphor for the self-interested incarnation of the American Dream which has dominated the public discourse of the United States since the post-war period: individualised, private, separate means of arrival, passing out of the picture and into the sunset – a lone... [read more]
In a recent interview with Northern Review, the poet Sophie Collins discussed women writers being compared in reviews to their characters:
‘Writers of course write about events that they have experienced, in one way or another, but the very fact of putting those experiences into literary prose immediately converts them into fiction. This is something I really believe but see everywhere challenged.’
She also talked about literary representations of trauma:
‘Naming oneself and... [read more]
A dinner party. Sarah is an artist going through an obsessive if unprofitable fixation on the larval and pupal stages of moths. Ray is a fellow guest invited by optimistic match-making friends. Satisfied with her self-imposed middle-aged solitude, Sarah is mildly alarmed by the situation, though finds Ray genuinely curious about her work. More surprisingly, she finds herself interested in his computing job, where he works on something termed persistence. ‘A quality your data gains when you... [read more]
Christopher Clason (ed.), E. T. A. Hoffmann: Transgressive Romanticism
reviewed by Polly Dickson
If you’re willing to loiter in the cold in the cemetery at Hallesches Tor, Berlin, on the evening of the 24 January, you will find yourself witness to a curious spectacle. Every year, on the anniversary of ETA Hoffmann’s birthday, members of the Hoffmann Society gather at his grave to commemorate his life. Their festivities include drinking, reading from his works and letters, and pouring wine onto his grave, to the cheer ‘In Hoffmanno!’ It may come as a surprise to a general reader,... [read more]
Peter Szendy, trans. Jan Plug, The Supermarket of the Visible: Toward a General Economy of Images
reviewed by Calum Watt
The Supermarket of the Visible is a path-breaking new book on the relation between images and money. Peter Szendy is a musicologist, philosopher and professor of comparative literature at Brown University. This short book consists of three film theory lectures originally given in Sydney in 2014, followed by further brief texts named ‘additional features’ or ‘deleted scenes’. Szendy’s book was originally published in French by Éditions de Minuit at the end of 2017 and immediately... [read more]
A quarter-century after its release, the Manic Street Preachers’ third album sounds as otherworldly and as close-at-hand as ever. A still-extraordinary listen, chilling and scalding by turns, the album is immersed in politics, sex, death, war, religion and all other subjects unfit for the dinner table. David Evans’ addition to Bloomsbury’s 33 1/3 series is a careful and thoughtful examination of The Holy Bible that manages to make sense of an album with which, as I discovered when writing... [read more]
Will Ashon, Chamber Music: Enter the Wu-Tang (in 36 Pieces)
reviewed by James Cook
‘Instead of opening a book,’ Will Ashon tells us on page 25 of his second work of non-fiction, ‘you’ve opened the box of a jigsaw puzzle.’ This assertion – or caution, perhaps – is apposite. Chamber Music examines the history of New York rap collective Wu-Tang Clan, and their first album, 1993’s Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), often described as ‘the greatest hip hop album of all time’. But instead of an orthodox band biography and pedestrian track-by-track appreciation,... [read more]
Tunnels are both ways into and out of trouble, dug around obstacles or right through them. Vision is indispensable, but few would say they had had visions. Like a waiter carrying drinks on a tray, the balance of opposites in each word collapses when they are compounded; ‘tunnel’ and ‘vision’ each mean several things, ‘tunnel vision’ means one thing.
The essays that make up Kevin Breathnach’s debut collection are interested in the question of what it means to be one thing, and... [read more]
Richard J. Evans, Eric Hobsbawm: A Life in History
reviewed by Ian Birchall
Historians do not sit outside of history, dispassionately assessing the ‘facts’. How they perceive even the remote past is conditioned by the world they live in – and by the way they live in that world. Of no-one is this truer than Eric Hobsbawm, one of the 20th century's most successful historians, a prolific writer whose books have been translated into more than 50 languages. Seven years after his death, Richard Evans has given us the history of the historian. It is a long story –... [read more]