Jeanette Winterson

Standard Name: Winterson, Jeanette
Birth Name: Jeanette Winterson
JW , writing in the late twentieth and the twenty-first centuries, has been acclaimed by some critics and savaged by others for her provocative and outspoken novels, in which she uncompromisingly confronts cultural notions of gender identity, sexuality, and religion. She attempts to change the world through her writing in the manner of but in place of political activism. Her work is widely studied and celebrated by feminist and lesbian readers and critics. Characteristically, she blends many genres: fable, fairytale, fantasy, history, philosophy, lesbian writing, science fiction, magic realism, and scientific studies. She is fond of stories in which the characters are on a journey together.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Reception Patricia Highsmith
The appearance of a biography by Andrew Wilson in June 2003 drew a remarkable panegyric on PH from Slavoj žiŽek : for him, he wrote, her name designates a sacred territory; his judgement of her...
Reception Ali Smith
Hotel World was shortlisted for the 2001 Man Booker Prize and the Orange Prize for Fiction. According to her interview with Jeanette Winterson , AS did not bother preparing a victory speech for the Booker...
Reception Shelagh Delaney
Fifty years after the debut of The Lion in Love, Jeanette Winterson called it a depressing essay in sexism.
qtd. in
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Textual Features Anna Livia
Subtitled A Collection of Lesbian Feminist Love Stories, this volume looks at the intimate relationships between women of various ages, classes, ethnicities, and sexual identities. Along with friendship, hostility, love, and sex, it addresses...
Textual Features Ali Smith
The subject of voice appears in a more darkly humorous aspect in The Child, wherein the woman narrator finds a baby mysteriously present in her shopping cart. The baby proceeds to spout all manner...
Textual Production Margaret Atwood
Atwood says she first read the Odyssey at about fifteen and was unpleasantly struck by the fact that Odysseus, after his triumphal homecoming and reunion with his faithful wife, kills not only the suitors whom...
Textual Production Natalie Clifford Barney
Jeanette Winterson owns a copy of this novel inscribed in NCB ' hand in July 1936: To my angel Romaine, illustrated by the two pictures of hers, which more clearly than my words, define this...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Michèle Roberts
This volume brings together pieces from various occasions and venues. In them MR discusses many of her favourite topics—the food, sex and god named in her title, the second and third often involving the relation...

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