Kathy Acker Essays

  • Sexual Politics In Kathy Goes To Haiti By Kathy Acker

    746 Words  | 2 Pages

    another. Kathy Goes to Haiti by Kathy Acker tells the story of a womans adventures in Haiti. The novel structurally layers graphic sex scenes and travel narratives in alternating chapters. Through travel and sexual adventures of the protagonist Kathy, the novel portrays sexual politics with the presence of a dominant male figure and the power they gain through such dominance. In this essay, I examine the presences of sexual politics in Kathy’s travels and sexual adventures. When Kathy

  • Angela Carter's The Passion Of New Eve And Don Quixote: Gender Analysis

    643 Words  | 2 Pages

    In this dissertation, ideological systems considered to limit the creation of Western female identity were explored through feminist discourse: Angela Carter’s The Passion of New Eve (1977) and Kathy Acker’s Don Quixote (1986). The former discussed the extent to which gendered identities are founded on biological difference and binary structures, looking at how these dichotomies work to confine female identity to a concept of fixed ideals. With reference to the work of Butler, Carter undermines essentialist

  • Acker's Message to Postmodernism in Blood and Guts in High School

    1800 Words  | 4 Pages

    A common complaint with Kathy Acker's work, particularly with Blood and Guts in High School, is that it is anti-male. This criticism, while valid, neglects to understand the methodology used in order to create a text in which patriarchal norms are no longer rampant. Despite its purpose of removing a gendered voice, postmodern fiction still contains elements of an authority which is predominately white and male. Acker changes this connotation by creating a “female text” in which women's bodies and

  • A Comparison of Beloved and Don Quixote

    1684 Words  | 4 Pages

    On reading Beloved by Toni Morrison and Don Quixote by Kathy Acker, there seem to be quite a few similarities in themes and characters contained in these texts, the most prevalent of which seems to be of love and language as a path to freedom. We see in Acker’s Don Quixote the abortion she must have before she embarks on a quest for true freedom, which is to love. Similarly, in Morrison’s Beloved, there is a kind abortion, the killing of Beloved by Sethe, which results in and from the freedom that

  • The Life of Rudolph Valentino

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    silent-screen idol Rudolph Valentino at age 31 sends his fans into a hysterical state of mass mourning.” (Valentino par. 1). When he died people were breaking windows and overturning cars at the chapel that Valentinos body was held at (Four par. 10). Jean Acker cancelled her plans that she made to go to Europe just to stay close to Valentino in his hours of need (Leider 382). Valentino loved California and that is where he became a legend so that shall be his final resting place (Leider 396). This came to

  • Personal Narrative: My Experience As A Medical Assistant

    1051 Words  | 3 Pages

    Graduating college with my associates in Occupational healthcare, I had majored in Medical Assistant. I had just completed 16 months in an accelerated program. The next step was to land a job. So I perfected my resume and I applied to everywhere that was accepting applications. One day a friend informed me about an opening she saw online that an OB/GYN office for a front desk position so I decided that I will apply for the job just to gain some experience in the healthcare field. Everything went

  • American Horror Story Analysis

    1507 Words  | 4 Pages

    The characters are those same characters you see when you go to your local carnival and pay five dollars to see their unique features. There is the Bearded Lady/Ethel Darling (Kathy Bates), her lobster-handed son Jimmy Darling (Evan Peters), the three- breasted woman/Desiree Dupree (Angela Bassett), and her husband, the strongman/Dell Toledo (Michael Chiklis). There are also some real characters that have real deformities. For

  • Levels of Fame

    927 Words  | 2 Pages

    Being famous for the wrong reasons is just the same as not being famous at all. What is the point of being famous if anyone can do it? The current definition of famous is being known by many people, which is way too broad for a definition. If everyone were to go by that definition then I would be considered famous. Meghan Daum really hit the nail right on the head when she said, “Not so long ago you had to make a pretty strenuous effort to become well enough known to register as famous” (Duam 512)

  • Analysis Of The Movie About Schmidt

    893 Words  | 2 Pages

    moments in the film that, while viewing it in class, caused the audience to burst into a roar of laughter. However, the film has a matching share of somber scenes where the audience was quiet and tense. Well known actors such as Jack Nicholson and Kathy Bates with the help of a great script give an outstanding performance that helped make the film flow especially well. There was no doubt when selecting the film About Schmidt when writing my final analysis paper. It truly is an exceptional film. When

  • Desire within Duras’ The Lover and Acker’s Blood and Guts in High School

    1913 Words  | 4 Pages

    School by Kathy Acker are both transgressive novels and post modernist fiction. Both novels tell a story of a young girl in which is experimenting with her sexuality at a young age. In The Lover the narrator is in love with a man who is giving her money. Blood and Guts in High School is a fictional novel about the main character’s love for her father amongst other men. The goal of this essay is to explore the desires in which drive both of the young women’s sexual behavior that Duras and Acker express

  • Experimentalism

    1255 Words  | 3 Pages

    I find exciting often gets called experimental. In America this is another word for marginal. It's patronizing. Other countries distribute legitimacy in literary culture differently. For example, when in the U.K., Kathy Acker wrote for the Times Literary Supplement. Can you imagine Acker writing for the New York Times Book Review!? Just the experience of reviewing her work in the NYT Book Review caused several reviewers to spontaneously combust. On the other side of the Atlantic, debates on literary

  • Postmodernism in Heaney's Poems Bogland and Tollund Man

    2849 Words  | 6 Pages

    Abstract This research takes a postmodern approach to Seamus Heaney's two poems: Bogland and The Tollund Man. The evidences in the research bring illuminations to the significant issues of postmodern concept. Heaney's poetry was studied in myth, politics and revolutionary movement in the area of Irish classical poetry. Recently, his poems are considered as postmodern. To answer that how much his poems are traditional, modern or postmodern is the aim of this project. Key Words: postmodernism