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Rose McLaren

Rose McLaren is an artist in London.



Articles Available Online


Talk Into My Bullet Hole

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July 2015

Rose McLaren

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July 2015

‘Someday people are going to read about you in a story or a poem. Will you describe yourself for those people?’ ‘Oh, I don’t...

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May 2014

Art Does Not Know a Beyond: On Karl Ove Knausgaard

Rose McLaren

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May 2014

Karl Ove Knausgaard’s My Struggle has an oddly medieval form: a cycle, composed of six auto-biographical books about the...

The 22 year old Australian narrator of K Patrick’s sensuous, subversive debut novel is a long way from home A matron at an unnamed boarding school in the remote English countryside, they regularly encounter the headmaster’s beautiful, self-assured wife Mrs S breezes in and out of the girls’ lives, admired for her enigmatic glamour more than the pastoral care she is supposedly providing The environs of the boarding houses, the adjoining church and lone village pub are much-photographed for their quaintness Relics of another age, they are beset by ‘endless rumours of ghosts and disappearances The imagined brutalities are always silent, always already happened’ A famous author, seemingly modelled on Charlotte Brontë, attended the school and hated it, living through a tuberculosis outbreak She based several uncomplimentary novels on her time there, before the school managed to transform this association into positive branding and preserved the places where the author had been most unhappy for posterity   As spring tips over into a baking hot summer, the narrator becomes consumed by obsessive lust for Mrs S, believing at first their ardour is not returned The very air seems thick with yearning: ‘the weather has not changed There is a lethargy Movement reduced, laughter dissolved into sighs’ As the frisson between the two blooms into a clandestine affair, Patrick’s present-tense telling makes time deliciously slow, the hot heaviness of the summer adding to the illusion that it could, perhaps, last forever, that the consequences will never arrive At first, the school girls seem mere   distractions, to be tended to during term and then sent home for the summer, their naivete a backdrop to the narrator’s full-throated adult desire But it becomes ever clearer that the setting is not just window dressing for an erotic fantasy of transgression, and is instead keenly relevant to the lovers’ very different understandings of their dalliance   A sequence of events concerning the girls gradually reveals the school’s ethos (and that of Mrs S) to be fundamentally at odds with the narrator’s own moral code When a girl’s violent rebuff of a schoolboy’s

Contributor

August 2014

Rose McLaren

Contributor

August 2014

Rose McLaren is an artist in London.

The Prosaic Sublime of Béla Tarr

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Issue No. 6

Rose McLaren

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Issue No. 6

I have to recognise it’s cosmical; the shit is cosmical. It’s not just social, it’s not just ontological, it’s really huge. And that’s why we...
Stalker, Writer or Professor? Geoff Dyer's Zona and Genre

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February 2012

Rose McLaren

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February 2012

‘So what kind of a writer am I, reduced to writing a summary of a film?’ wonders Geoff Dyer half way through Zona. Such...

READ NEXT

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May 2016

Cinema on the Page

Jonathan Gibbs

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May 2016

Film is a bully. It wants to make its viewers feel, and it has the tools to do so....

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July 2012

Run, Comrades, #YOLO! — Cursory Notes on Radical Hashtag Forms

Huw Lemmey

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July 2012

I’m not up on the Internet, but I hear that is a democratic possibility. People can connect with each...

Interview

March 2014

Interview with Antón Arrufat

TR. Jennie Rothwell

J. S. Tennant

Interview

March 2014

Author of the novels La noche del aguafiestas and the experimental Ejercicios para hacer de la esterilidad virtud, Antón...

 

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