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Tausif Noor
Tausif Noor is a critic and doctoral student at the University of California Berkeley, where he studies modern and contemporary art history. His writing on art, literature, and visual culture appears in Artforum, frieze, The Nation, The New York Times and other venues, as well as in artist catalogues and various edited volumes.

Articles Available Online


Devil in the Detail: on Leesa Gazi’s ‘Hellfire’

Book Review

July 2021

Tausif Noor

Book Review

July 2021

British-Bangladeshi novelist Tahmima Anam’s debut A Golden Age (2007) tracks the early stirrings of revolution in East Bengal from the 1950s to the climax...

Art Review

May 2019

Simone Fattal, Works and Days

Tausif Noor

Art Review

May 2019

For the last five decades, Simone Fattal has produced works that refract the particularities of the present vis-à-vis a...

Nicholas Mosley’s reputation as a writer has often been obscured by the extraordinary nature of his family background Born in 1923 to an aristocratic family, he inherited the title of 3rd Baron Ravensdale His grandfather was George Curzon, the last Viceroy of India to serve under Queen Victoria He is also the son of Oswald Mosley, who founded the British Union of Fascists in 1932 Nicholas’s mother, Cynthia Curzon, died when he was ten, and afterwards his father married Diana Mitford   Mosley’s extensive bibliography contains nineteen novels and eleven non-fiction titles His early novels employ a realist style and possess a moral intensity in part inspired by French Existentialism During World War II he served in the British Army in Italy, an experience he drew on for his first novel, Spaces of the Dark (1951), and which haunts many of his subsequent fictions   Perhaps the best place to begin exploring Mosley’s oeuvre is Accident (1965), which was adapted into a well-known film starring Dirk Bogarde, directed by Joseph Losey and scripted by Harold Pinter While the film is strong, the novel is even more so, its action taking place within a vivid portrait of Oxford University and its environs, coloured with ominous undertones The narrative sees a philosopher-don’s moral system brought into question after one of his students is involved in a car crash that he feels personally responsible for   In Impossible Object (1968) Mosley stretched his fiction into more abstract, modernist territories In this series of subtly interwoven short stories the precise identities of a number of married couples and lovers are made oblique, to suggest how even spouses can remain, finally, unknown to each other   The novel which deals most directly with the political consequences of his family life and upbringing is Hopeful Monsters (1990), an epic spanning some 550 pages, which examines the competing ideological confusions of the 1930s through the love story of a Jewish-German anthropologist and an English physicist working on the atomic bomb It is one of the most important and fully realized British novels of recent decades and deserves to be far better known than it currently

Contributor

March 2018

Tausif Noor

Contributor

March 2018

Tausif Noor is a critic and doctoral student at the University of California Berkeley, where he studies modern and contemporary art...

INTERVIEW WITH ANAND PATWARDHAN

Art Review

July 2018

Tausif Noor

Art Review

July 2018

By the late 1990s a right wing government in the shape of a BJP-Shiv Sena alliance had come to power for the first time...
Danh Vo, Take My Breath Away

Art Review

April 2018

Tausif Noor

Art Review

April 2018

‘When you love, you are nailed to the cross,’ says a character in Rainer Fassbinder’s film In a Year of 13 Moons (1978). In...

READ NEXT

poetry

March 2013

Fugitive

James Byrne

poetry

March 2013

I trace the stacked voices of shouters how they immingle fraternally on first hearing with the vaporous nick of...

fiction

September 2011

In the Aisles

Clemens Meyer

fiction

September 2011

Before I became a shelf-stacker and spent my evenings and nights in the aisles of the cash and carry...

Interview

Issue No. 12

Interview with Douglas Coupland

Tom Overton

Interview

Issue No. 12

Douglas Coupland likes crowdsourcing. I should know, because he crowdsourced me shortly after the first part of this interview....

 

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