Angela carter brief biography of williams
•
Categories
Angela Carter was born Angela Olive Stalker on May 7th, 1940, in South London. Her father was a Scottish journalist who shared his love of cinema with his daughter (Yule 145). Her stories, displaying dramatic visual language, reflect her interest in the glamour of theatre, with surreal architecture and dramatic settings. Her protagonists are detached from the reader, much as movie stars are detached from the audience, uncanny and never quite sympathetic. Carter has stated that she relies on movies for imagery and plot elements (Yule 145). Her writing seems to borrow psychological elements of surrealism, science fiction and fantasy, mixed with a believable reality; realism mixes with extravagant fantasy “nightmarish dislocation, and Gothic horror” to produce magical realism (Schlueter 91). Carter experiments with the psychological anxieties that are attached to societal norms. She believed that fiction has the ability to “interpret everyday reality through imagery derived from our unconscious, from subterranean areas behind everyday experiences” (Yule 145).
My first encounter with Carter was reading Nights and the Circus, and then The Magic Toy Shop a few days later. Her language is almost encyclopedic yet sensuous and decadent. Reading her work feels like
•
The Creation of Angela Carter: A Biography
NONFICTION
by Edmund Gordon
University Univ. Wounded. 2017. 544p. photos. keep information. index. ISBN 9780190626846. $35; ebk. ISBN 9780190626860. Dusky
Mockup ISBN
Judgment Highly not obligatory for objective
•
Angela Carter: Biography
Angela Carter was born on 7th May 1940 in Eastbourne, Sussex. However, she was raised partly in South London and partly in Yorkshire, where she was evacuated to her grandmother’s home. She was the youngest child of Sophia Olive and Hugh Alexander Stalker, having one brother who was eleven years older. She experienced a challenging relationship with her mother, who was controlling, overprotective, and possessive. She left home and asserted her independence after she won a scholarship at a prep school.
Angela Carter married her first husband, the folk singer Paul Carter when she was nineteen. Ultimately, she didn’t feel that her husband supported her writing, a factor which led to their divorce after nine years of marriage. She kept his surname following the divorce.
Her father was a night editor at the Press Association and used his connections to help her to get a job as a reporter. She also started writing fiction and studied English Literature at the University of Bristol.
She won the Somerset Maugham Award and used the prize money to move to Tokyo, Japan. She lived there for two years, writing a collection of short stories called Fireworks: Nine Profane Pieces (1974) and articles for New Society. It was during this time that Ang