Mailing List


Rebecca Tamás
REBECCA TAMÁS is a Lecturer in Creative Writing at York St John University. Her pamphlet Savage was published by Clinic, and was a LRB Bookshop pamphlet of the year, and a Poetry School book of the year. Rebecca’s first full-length poetry collection, WITCH, was published by Penned in the Margins in March 2019. She is editor, together with Sarah Shin, of Spells: 21st Century Occult Poetry, published by Ignota Books. Her collection Strangers: Essays on the Human and Nonhuman was published by Makina Books in October 2020.  

Articles Available Online


Interview with Ariana Reines

Interview

July 2019

Rebecca Tamás

Interview

July 2019

I first became aware of Ariana Reines’s work through her early poetry collection The Cow (2006), which went on to win the prestigious Alberta Prize. I...

Essay

Issue No. 24

The Songs of Hecate: Poetry and the Language of the Occult

Rebecca Tamás

Essay

Issue No. 24

  I have gone out, a possessed witch, haunting the black air, braver at night; dreaming evil, I have...

Acker by Kraus is a tantalising prospect How do you go about writing a biography of an inveterate self-mythologiser, who made over fiction into life just as she made over life into fiction? How do you do it when her scene – the downtown New York artistic demi-monde of the 1970s and early 1980s – is already so exhaustively storied? And what position do you take as a biographer when your own name is indelibly yoked together with that of your subject?   Kraus herself, quoted in the blurb, prepares us for a certain kind of book: writing about Acker, she says, elicited in her ‘this incredible frisson of feeling that often I could write “I” instead of “she”’ We might expect, then, a matrilineal act of inhabitation, or of Acker-ish ventriloquism – the ‘collisions between I’s’ seen in the novels that Kraus notes as one of Acker’s most powerful experimental effects The story is told straighter than you expect, but there are touches of that here, moments of close-up exposition where it appears that the biographer has taken up residence inside her subject: ‘she realised that this outpouring might seem a bit strange, but she couldn’t stop’   Yet Kraus is generally strangely absent – written out, even We know they moved in the same incestuous circles, shared similar artistic preoccupations and both had significant relationships with the critical theorist Sylvère Lotringer, but Kraus appears in the first-person only once, attending an Acker reading at the Mudd Club in 1980 Fittingly, for this writer who never kept any of her correspondence, and whose ‘greatest strength and weakness… lies in the exclusion of all viewpoints except that of the narrator’, Acker often narrates herself Large chunks and small slivers of her novels and diaries are welded into the book, distinguished only by italics But here her correspondents are also allowed to talk back Kraus gathers and places uneasily side-by-side multiple, often contradictory, accounts from friends, peers and lovers   It begins after the end, following her death from breast cancer in 1997, as Acker’s friends scatter her ashes This, writes Kraus, is her ‘establishing shot’,

Contributor

July 2015

Rebecca Tamás

Contributor

July 2015

REBECCA TAMÁS is a Lecturer in Creative Writing at York St John University. Her pamphlet Savage was published by Clinic, and...

Interrogations

poetry

Issue No. 14

Rebecca Tamás

poetry

Issue No. 14

INTERROGATION (1)     Are you a witch?   Are you   Have you had relations with the devil?   Have you   Have...

READ NEXT

Art

January 2012

Interview with Ryan Gander

Timothée Chaillou

Art

January 2012

London-based conceptual artist Ryan Gander masters the art of storytelling through an immensely complex yet subtly coherent body of...

Art

Issue No. 11

Sarah Jones

Sarah Jones

Art

Issue No. 11

A series of photographs by the acclaimed British artist Sarah Jones is published in The White Review No. 11. 

Art

February 2013

Haitian Art and National Tragedy

Rob Sharp

Art

February 2013

Thousands of Haiti’s poorest call it home: Grand Rue, a district of Port-au-Prince once run by merchants and bankers,...

 

Get our newsletter

 

* indicates required