Joyce Carol Oates
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+ | "The [[grotesque]] always possesses a blunt [[physicality]] that no amount of [[epistemological]] [[exegesis]] can [[exorcise]]. One might define it, in fact, as the very antithesis of "[[nice]]."--''[[Haunted: Tales of the Grotesque]]'' (1994) by Joyce Carol Oates | ||
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- | '''Joyce Carol Oates''' (born [[June 16]] [[1938]]) is an [[United States|American]] author and the Roger S. Berlind '52 Professor in the Humanities with the Program in Creative Writing at [[Princeton University]], where she has taught since 1978.{{GFDL}} | + | '''Joyce Carol Oates''' (born [[June 16]] [[1938]]) is an [[American author]]. She writes in the tradition of [[gothic fiction]], in such novels as ''Bellefleur, A Bloodsmoor Romance'' and short story collections such as ''Night-Side''. [[Sexual violence]] is a central theme in Oates's work, noted in works such as ''Rape: A Love Story''. When once asked why her writing is so violent, Oates remarked that the question is always sexist. "The serious writer, after all, bears witness." She is a connoisseur of the grotesque. In ''[[Haunted: Tales of the Grotesque]]'' (1994) she defined that sensibility as the antithesis of "[[nice]]." |
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"The grotesque always possesses a blunt physicality that no amount of epistemological exegesis can exorcise. One might define it, in fact, as the very antithesis of "nice."--Haunted: Tales of the Grotesque (1994) by Joyce Carol Oates |
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Joyce Carol Oates (born June 16 1938) is an American author. She writes in the tradition of gothic fiction, in such novels as Bellefleur, A Bloodsmoor Romance and short story collections such as Night-Side. Sexual violence is a central theme in Oates's work, noted in works such as Rape: A Love Story. When once asked why her writing is so violent, Oates remarked that the question is always sexist. "The serious writer, after all, bears witness." She is a connoisseur of the grotesque. In Haunted: Tales of the Grotesque (1994) she defined that sensibility as the antithesis of "nice."