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Kathy Acker

Kathy Acker (April 18, 1947[2] [disputed] – November 30, 1997) was an American experimental novelist, playwright, essayist, and postmodernist writer, known for her idiosyncratic and transgressive writing that dealt with themes such as childhood trauma, sexuality and rebellion. She was influenced by the Black Mountain School poets, William S. Burroughs, David Antin, Carolee Schneeman, Eleanor Antin, French critical theory, mysticism, and pornography,[3] as well as classic literature.

Kathy Acker
Acker in 1996
BornKaren Lehman
(1947-04-18)April 18, 1947 (disputed)[1]
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedNovember 30, 1997(1997-11-30) (aged 50)
Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • playwright
  • essayist
  • poet
CitizenshipUnited States
Notable worksBlood and Guts in High School (novel)
Great Expectations
New York (short story)
Notable awardsPushcart Prize (1979)
SpouseRobert Acker (1966–19??)
Peter Gordon (1976; annulled)

Biography

Early life

The only child of Donald and Claire (nee Weill) Lehman, Acker was born Karen Lehman in New York City in 1947,[4][5] although the Library of Congress gives her birth year as 1948, while the editors of Encyclopædia Britannica gave her birth year as April 18, 1948, New York, New York, U.S. and died November 30, 1997, Tijuana, Mexico.[6] Most obituaries, including The New York Times, cited her birth year as 1944.[7]

Her family was from a wealthy, assimilated, German-Jewish background that was culturally but not religiously Jewish. Her paternal grandmother, Florence Weill, was an Austrian Jew who had inherited a small fortune from her husband's glove-making business.[8] Acker's grandparents went into political exile from Alsace-Lorraine prior to World War I, due to the rising nationalism of pre-Nazi Germany, moving to Paris and then to the United States. According to Acker, her grandparents were "first generation French-German Jews" whose ancestors originally hailed from the Pale of Settlement. In an interview with the magazine Tattoo Jew, Acker stated that religious Judaism "means nothing to me. I don't run away from it, it just means nothing to me" and elaborated that her parents were "high-German Jews" who held cultural prejudices against Yiddish-speaking Eastern European Jews. ("I was trained to run away from Polish Jews.")[9]

The pregnancy was unplanned; Donald Lehman abandoned the family before Karen's birth. Her relationship with her domineering mother even into adulthood was fraught with hostility and anxiety because Acker felt unloved and unwanted. Her mother soon remarried, to Albert Alexander, whose surname Karen was given, although the writer later described her mother's union with Alexander as a passionless marriage to an ineffectual man. Karen (later Kathy) had a half-sister, Wendy, by her mother's second marriage, but the two women were never close and long estranged. By the time of Kathy's death, she had requested that her friends not contact Wendy, as some had suggested.[10] Acker was raised in her mother and stepfather's home in the Sutton Place neighborhood of Manhattan's prosperous Upper East Side. In 1978, Claire Alexander, Karen's mother, committed suicide.[11][12] As an adult, Acker tried to track down her father, but abandoned her search after she discovered that her father had disappeared after killing a trespasser on his yacht and spending six months in a psychiatric asylum until the state excused him of murder charges.[13]

Education

Acker attended the Birch Wathen Lenox School, a private school for girls on the Upper East Side.[14] As an undergraduate at Brandeis University, she studied Classics and "took advantage of loosened mores, attending orgies thrown by theatre kids."[14] In 1966, she married Robert Acker, and took his surname. Robert Acker was the son of lower-middle-class Polish-Jewish immigrants. Her mother and stepfather had hoped she would marry a wealthy man and did not expect the marriage to Acker to last long.[15] She became interested in writing novels and, with Robert, moved to California to attend University of California, San Diego, where David Antin, Eleanor Antin, and Jerome Rothenberg were among her teachers. She received her bachelor's degree in 1968. After moving to New York, she attended two years of graduate school at the City University of New York in Classics, specializing in Greek. She did not earn a graduate degree. During her time in New York, she was employed as a file clerk, secretary, stripper, and porn performer.[3]

Start of career and relationships

Although her birth name was Karen, she was known as Kathy to her friends and family. Her first work appeared in print as part of the burgeoning New York City literary underground of the mid-1970s. During the 1970s, Acker often moved back and forth between San Diego, San Francisco, and New York. She married the composer and experimental musician Peter Gordon shortly before the end of their seven-year relationship.[16] Later, she had relationships with the theorist, publisher, and critic Sylvère Lotringer and then with the filmmaker and film theorist Peter Wollen.[17] In 1996, Acker left San Francisco and moved to London to live with the writer and music critic Charles Shaar Murray.[4] She married twice. She was openly bisexual.

In 1979, she won the Pushcart Prize for her short story "New York City in 1979." During the early 1980s, she lived in London, where she wrote several of her most critically acclaimed works. After returning to the United States in the late 1980s, she worked as an adjunct professor at the San Francisco Art Institute for about six years and as a visiting professor at several universities, including the University of Idaho, the University of California, San Diego (UC-San Diego), University of California, Santa Barbara (UC-Santa Barbara), the California Institute of Arts, and Roanoke College.[18]

Later life and death

In April 1996, Acker was diagnosed with breast cancer and she elected to have a double mastectomy. In January 1997, she wrote about her loss of faith in conventional medicine in a Guardian article, "The Gift of Disease."[19]

In the article, she explains that after unsuccessful surgery, which left her feeling physically mutilated and emotionally debilitated, she rejected the passivity of the patient in the medical mainstream and began to seek out the advice of nutritionists, acupuncturists, psychic healers, and Chinese herbalists. She found appealing the claim that instead of being an object of knowledge, as in Western medicine, the patient becomes a seer, a seeker of wisdom, that illness becomes the teacher and the patient the student. After pursuing several forms of alternative medicine in England and the United States, Acker died a year and a half later, on November 30, 1997, aged 50, from complications of cancer in a Tijuana alternative cancer clinic, the only alternative-treatment facility that accepted her with her advanced stage of cancer.[4] She died in what was called "Room 101", to which her friend Alan Moore quipped, "There's nothing that woman can't turn into a literary reference." (Room 101, in the climax of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, turns out to be the torture chamber in which the Inner Party subjects its political prisoners to their own worst fears.)[20]

Literary overview

Acker was associated with the New York punk movement of the late 1970s and early 1980s. The punk aesthetic influenced her literary style.[21] In the 1970s, before the term "postmodernism" was popular, Acker began writing her books. These books contain features that would eventually be considered postmodernist work.[22] Her controversial body of work borrows heavily from the experimental styles of William S. Burroughs and Marguerite Duras. Her writing strategies at times used forms of pastiche and deployed Burroughs's cut-up technique, involving cutting-up and scrambling passages and sentences into a somewhat random remix. Acker defined her writing as existing post-nouveau roman European tradition.[23] In her texts, she combines biographical elements, power, sex and violence. Indeed, critics often compare her writing to that of Alain Robbe-Grillet and Jean Genet. Critics have noticed links to Gertrude Stein and photographers Cindy Sherman and Sherrie Levine. Acker's novels also exhibit a fascination with and an indebtedness to tattoos.[24] She dedicated Empire of the Senseless to her tattooist.

Acker published her first book, Politics, in 1972. Although the collection of poems and essays did not garner much critical or public attention, it did establish her reputation within the New York punk scene. In 1973, she published her first novel (under the pseudonym Black Tarantula), The Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula: Some Lives of Murderesses. The following year, she published her second novel, I Dreamt I Was a Nymphomaniac: Imagining. Both works are reprinted in Portrait of an Eye.[25]

In 1979, she received popular attention after winning a Pushcart Prize for her short story "New York City in 1979." She did not receive critical attention, however, until publishing Great Expectations in 1982. The opening of Great Expectations is an obvious re-writing of Charles Dickens's work of the same name. It features her usual subject matter, including a semi-autobiographical account of her mother's suicide and the appropriation of several other texts, including Pierre Guyotat's violent and sexually explicit "Eden Eden Eden." That same year, Acker published a chapbook, entitled Hello, I'm Erica Jong.[23] She appropriated from a number of influential writers. These writers include Charles Dickens, Nathaniel Hawthorne, John Keats, William Faulkner, T.S Eliot, the Brontë sisters, the Marquis de Sade, Georges Bataille, and Arthur Rimbaud.[26]

Acker wrote the script for the 1983 film Variety.[27] Acker wrote a text on the photographer Marcus Leatherdale that was published in 1983, in an art catalogue for the Molotov Gallery in Vienna.[28]

In 1984, Acker's first British publication, the novel Blood and Guts in High School was published soon after its publication by Grove Press in New York.[29] That same year, she was signed by Grove Press, one of the legendary independent publishers committed to controversial and avant-garde writing; she was one of the last writers taken on by Barney Rosset before the end of his tenure there. Most of her work was published by them, including re-issues of important earlier work. She wrote for several magazines and anthologies, including the periodicals RE/Search, Angel Exhaust, monochrom and Rapid Eye. As she neared the end of her life, her work was more well-received by the conventional press; for example, The Guardian published a number of her essays, interviews, and articles, among them was an interview with the Spice Girls.[3] In Memoriam to Identity draws attention to popular analyses of Rimbaud's life and The Sound and the Fury, constructing or revealing social and literary identity. Although known in the literary world for creating a whole new style of feminist prose and for her transgressive fiction, she was also a punk and feminist icon for her devoted portrayals of subcultures, strong-willed women, and violence.[23]

Notwithstanding the increased recognition she garnered for Great Expectations, Blood and Guts in High School is often considered Acker's breakthrough work. Published in 1984, it is one of her most extreme explorations of sexuality and violence. Borrowing from, among other texts, Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, Blood and Guts details the experiences of Janey Smith, a sex-addicted and pelvic inflammatory disease-ridden urbanite who is in love with a father who sells her into slavery. Many critics criticized it for being demeaning toward women, and Germany banned it completely. Acker published the German court judgment against Blood and Guts in High School in Hannibal Lecter, My Father.

Acker published Empire of the Senseless in 1988, and considered it a turning point in her writing. While she still borrows from other texts, including Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the appropriation is less obvious. However, one of Acker's more controversial appropriations is from William Gibson's 1984 text, Neuromancer, in which Acker equates code with the female body and its militaristic implications. In 1988, she published Literal Madness: Three Novels, which included three previously-published works: Florida deconstructs and reduces John Huston's 1948 film noir Key Largo into its base sexual politics, Kathy Goes to Haiti details a young woman's relationship and sexual exploits while on vacation, and My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini provides a fictional autobiography of the Italian filmmaker in which he solves his own murder.[citation needed]

Between 1990 and 1993, she published four more books: In Memoriam to Identity (1990); Hannibal Lecter, My Father (1991); Portrait of an Eye: Three Novels (1992), also composed of already-published works; and My Mother: Demonology (1992). Her last novel, Pussy, King of the Pirates, was published in 1996,[30] which she, Rico Bell, and the rest of rock band the Mekons also reworked into an operetta, which they performed at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, in 1997.[31]

In 2007, Amandla Publishing re-published Acker's articles that she wrote for the New Statesman from 1989 to 1991.[32] Grove Press published two unpublished early novellas in the volume Rip-Off Red, Girl Detective and The Burning Bombing of America, and a collection of selected work, Essential Acker, edited by Amy Scholder and Dennis Cooper in 2002.[33][34]

Three volumes of her non-fiction have been published and republished since her death. In 2002, New York University staged Discipline and Anarchy, a retrospective exhibition of her works,[35] while in 2008, London's Institute of Contemporary Arts screened an evening of films influenced by Acker.[36]

Posthumous reputation

A collection of essays on Acker's work, titled Lust for Life: On the Writings of Kathy Acker, edited by Carla Harryman, Avital Ronell, and Amy Scholder, was published by Verso in 2006 and includes essays by Nayland Blake, Leslie Dick, Robert Glück, Carla Harryman, Laurence Rickels, Avital Ronell, Barrett Watten, and Peter Wollen.[37] In 2009, the first collection of essays to focus on academic study of Acker, Kathy Acker and Transnationalism was published. In 2015, Semiotext(e) published I'm Very Into You, a book of Acker's email correspondence with media theorist McKenzie Wark, edited by Matias Viegener, her executor and head of the Kathy Acker Literary Trust.[38] Her personal library is housed in a reading room at the University of Cologne in Germany, and her papers are divided between NYU's Fales Library and the Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Duke University. A limited body of her recorded readings and discussions of her works exists in the special collections archive of University of California, San Diego.

In 2013, the Acker Award was launched and named for Kathy Acker. Awarded to living and deceased members of the San Francisco or New York avant-garde art scene, the award is financed by Alan Kaufman and Clayton Patterson.[39]

In 2017, American writer and artist Chris Kraus published After Kathy Acker: A Literary Biography, the first book-length biography of Acker's life experiences and literary strategies.[11][40][17] American writer Douglas A. Martin published Acker. a book-length study of Acker's influences and artistic trajectory.[41]

In 2018, British writer Olivia Laing published Crudo, a novel which references Acker's works and life, and whose main character is a woman called Kathy, suffering double breast cancer; yet book's events are situated in August–September 2017.[42] In 2019, Amy Scholder and Douglas A. Martin co-edited Kathy Acker: The Last Interview and Other Conversations.[43] Kate Zambreno wrote on Kathy Acker in her essay "New York City, Summer 2013" published as part of the collection Screen Tests (Harpers Collins, 2019). The essay was originally published in Icon edited by Amy Scholder (Feminist Press, 2014).

Between May 1, 2019 and August 4, 2019, the exhibition I, I, I, I, I, I, I, Kathy Acker was held at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. The exhibition featured works by more than 40 artists, such as Reza Abdoh, Johanna Hedva and Reba Maybury.[44] In 2020, Grove Press issued a new edition of Portrait of an Eye, with an introduction by Kate Zambreno.

Bibliography

Novels, stories

  • Politics (1972; excerpts published in Hannibal Lecter, My Father (1991); full text published in Kathy Acker (1971-1975) (2019)
  • The Burning Bombing of America: The Destruction of the United States (pub. 2002, from manuscript 1972)
  • Rip-Off Red, Girl Detective (pub. 2002, from manuscript 1973)
  • Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula By the Black Tarantula (1973)
  • I Dreamt I Was a Nymphomaniac: Imagining (1974)
  • Haiti: A Trip to the Voodoo Doctor (Travelers Digest Issue 1, Volume 1, 1977; later published in Kathy Goes to Haiti)
  • Adult Life of Toulouse Lautrec (1978)
  • Florida (1978)
  • Kathy Goes To Haiti (1978)
  • The Seattle Book: For Randy and Heather (1980, with illustrations)
  • The Persian Poems by Janey Smith (Travelers Digest Issue 2, Volume 1, ed. Jeff Goldberg, 1980; poems from Blood and Guts in High School, with drawings by Robert Kushner, 1980)
  • N.Y.C. in 1979 (1981)
  • Hello, My Name Is Erica Jong (1982; also available in Blood and Guts in High School)
  • Translations of the Diaries of Laure the Schoolgirl (1983)
  • Implosion (1983; also available in My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini)
  • Great Expectations (1983)
  • Algeria : A Series of Invocations Because Nothing Else Works (1984)
  • My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini (1984)
  • Blood and Guts in High School (1984)
  • Don Quixote: Which Was a Dream (1986)
  • Lust: A Sailor's Slight Identity (1987, available in Hannibal Lecter, My Father)
  • Literal Madness: Three Novels (Reprinted 1987; contains Kathy Goes to Haiti, My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini, Florida)
  • Young Lust (1988; contains Kathy Goes to Haiti, The Adult Life of Toulouse Lautrec by Henri Toulouse Lautrec, and Florida)
  • Empire of the Senseless (1988)
  • In Memoriam to Identity (1990)
  • Hannibal Lecter, My Father (1991)
  • Portrait of an Eye (1992, includes early novels Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula By the Black Tarantula (1973); I Dreamt I Was a Nymphomaniac: Imagining (1974); Adult Life of Toulouse Lautrec (1978)
  • My Mother: Demonology (1994)
  • Pussycat Fever (with Diane Dimassa and Freddie Baer, illustrators, 1995)
  • Pussy, King of the Pirates (1996)
  • Portrait of an Eye: Three Novels (Reprinted 1998)
  • Eurydice in the Underworld (1998)
  • Essential Acker: The Selected Writings of Kathy Acker (2002)[45]
  • New York City in 1979 (2018, Penguin Modern)
  • Kathy Acker (1971–1975) (2019, Éditions Ismael, 656 pgs.), ed. Justin Gajoux and Claire Finch, critical edition of unpublished early writings from 1971 to 1975

Some of the contents from * Kathy Acker (1971-1975) (2019, Éditions Ismael, 656 pgs.), ed. Justin Gajoux and Claire Finch, critical edition of unpublished early writings from 1971 to 1975

  • The Golden Woman (poem, 19691970)
  • Section from DIARY (1-2, 1971)
  • Portraits (7, 1971)
  • Portraits and Visions (summer 1971)
  • Diary Warmcatfur (1, 1972)
  • Politics (1972, full text)
  • For H. (1972)
  • Revolutionary Diary of an Anarchist (1972)
  • Journal Black Cats Black Jewels (summer 1972)
  • Gold Songs for Jimi Hendrix (1972)
  • Breaking Up (summer 1972)
  • [Letter to Berndadette Mayer] (fall 1972)
  • Entrance into Dwelling in Paradise (poems, fall 1972)
  • [Exercises] (fall 1972)
  • Stripper Disintergration (2-3, 1973)
  • Section from Diary (3, 1973)
  • [Letter to Bernadette Mayer] (1973)
  • The Beginning of the Thesmophoriazusae (7-9, 1973)
  • Part I of Breaking Through Memories into Desire (11, 1973)
  • Part II [of Breaking Through Memories...] (1, 1974)
  • Conversations (1, 1974)
  • [Letters to Alan Sondheim] (2-3, 1974)
  • [Letter to Bernadette Mayer] (3/3/1974)

Poetry

This is not a complete list.

This symbol # indicates published in Kathy Acker (1971–1975) (2019, Éditions Ismael, 656 pgs.), ed. Justin Gajoux and Claire Finch, critical edition of unpublished early writings from 1971 to 1975

  • The Golden Woman (poem, 19691970) #
  • Journal Black Cats Black Jewels (summer 1972) #
  • Gold Songs for Jimi Hendrix (1972) #
  • Part I of Breaking Through Memories into Desire (11, 1973) #
  • Part II [of Breaking Through Memories...] (1, 1974) #
  • Baby don't give baby don't get (from the novel Florida)
  • Homage to Leroi Jones (poems, pub. 2015 by Lost and Found: The CUNY Poetics Documents Initiative, from manuscript 1972)

Discussion/reading of two poems from the novel Blood and Guts in High School

Stage work

  • Desire (Bomb 3, spring 1982)
  • Lulu Unchained (drama, 1985, first performed at ICA; available in the novel Don Quixote: Which Was a Dream)
  • The Birth of the Poet (drama, 1981; performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in 1985, directed by Richard Foreman; published in Eurydice in the Underworld; also in Wordplays 5: An Anthology of New American Drama, 1987)
  • Requiem (drama, 1997; published in Eurydice in the Underworld)

Screenplay

  • Variety (screenplay, 1985, directed by Bette Gordon; unpublished)

Recordings, music collabs

  • Pussy (1994, produced by CodeX; contains two sections, O and Ange and Pussy, King of the Pirates: Her Story)
  • The Stabbing Hand (1995) – spoken-word guest appearance on alternate mix of song by Oxbow, included on reissues of album Let Me Be a Woman[46]
  • Pussy, King of the Pirates (1997, Touch and Go Records) - Acker's operetta, performed and recorded by the Mekons with Kathy Acker
  • Redoing Childhood (2000) spoken-word recording, KRS 349.

Essays (periodicals, book reviews, movie reviews, art reviews, speeches, and other texts)

This is not a complete list. The symbols ^^ indicate it's available at Duke University's collection of Kathy Acker's papers. The symbol # indicates the essay is included in the Kathy Acker collection Bodies of Work: Essays (London: Serpent's Tail, 1997).

  • Notes on Writing from the Life of Baudelaire (1979^^)
  • New York City 1983 (from Marcus Leatherdale: His photographs – a book in a series on people and years, with Christian Michelides, published by Wien, Molotov, 1983)
  • Realism for the Cause of Future Revolution (from Art After Modernism: Rethinking Representation, 1984#)
  • Collette (1985#)
  • An Actual Institution of Art (1986^^)
  • Introduction to collection Young Lust (1988)
  • Introduction to Boxcar Bertha (1988#)
  • A Few Notes on Two of my Books (from Review of Contemporary Fiction, vol 9, no. 3, Fall 1989#)
  • Blue Valentine (1989^^)
  • Review of Scandal for Weiner (1989^^)
  • Low: Good and Evil in the Work of Nayland Blake (1990) A selection is available in the Kathy Acker collection Body of Works: Essays.
  • The World According to Peter Greenway (from The Village Voice, vol. 35, April 17, 1990#)
  • In the Underworld (1990^^)
  • William Burroughs' Realism (1990)
  • From Counter-Culture to Culture, But Here's no Culture/Fuck Ecology and the Death of Communism/The Meaning of the 80s (1990^^)
  • New York City 25/12/89-31/12/89 at the Edge of the New (1990^^)
  • The Language of Sex The Sex of Language (1990)
  • Critical Languages (1990#)
  • Dead Doll Humility (1990).
  • The Meaning of the Eighties (from The Village Voice, vol. 35, January 2, 1990#)
  • Bodybuilding (1991)
  • The War at Home: Bonfire of the Vanities by Brian de Palma (1991^^)
  • Red Wings: Concerning Richard Prince's "Spiritual America" (from Parkett, 1992#)
  • Against Ordinary Language: The Language of the Body (from The Last Sex: Feminism and Outlaw Bodies, 1993#)
  • Reading the Lack of the Body: The Writing of the Marquis de Sade (from The Divine Sade, 1994#)
  • After the End of the Art World (1994^^)
  • Statements on the Nature of Musical Comedy (1994^^)
  • Seeing Gender (from Critical Quarterly, 1995#)
  • Running through the World: On the Art of Kiki Smith (1995^^)
  • Mirror: Two Works of Art (1995^^)
  • Moving Into Wonder (An introduction to Time Capsule: A Concise Encyclopedia by Women Artists, 1995#)
  • Unidentified contribution to Dust: Essays (1995)
  • Writing, Identity, and Copyright in the Net Age (from MMLA, vol. 28, no. 1, Spring 1995#)
  • Samuel Delaney: Orpheus (1996^^)
  • On Delany the Magiian (Foreword to Trouble on Triton, 1996#)
  • The Future (1997#)
  • The Gift of the Disease (The Guardian, January 18, 1997)
  • Bruce Willis and Me (1997^^)
  • Bodies of Work: Essays (1997). Includes a preface. Any essay with symbol # indicates it is included in this collection.
  • Acker: Articles from The New Statesman 1989-1991 (2007, Amandla Publishing)
  • Russian Constructivism (from Blasted Allegories) (date unknown#)
  • Notes on a title page of Herman Melville's White Jacket (Undated)
  • Some American Cities (from Marxism Today) (date unknown#)
  • Postmoderism (undated #)
  • About Robert Mapplethorpe (undated^^)
  • Allen Ginsberg: A Personal Portrait (undated^^)
  • A Bunch of Propositions about the Hernandez Brothers (undated^^)
  • On Twin Peaks (undated^^)
  • Women who have Big Muscles (undated^^)
  • The End of Poetry (undated^^)
  • Eugenie De Franval (undated^^)
  • Fabre's Work or Opera (undated^^)
  • Unidentified essay, part of the Iain Sinclair inventory.

Book reviews - typescripts of sixteen different reviews from 1985 to 1989 - available at Duke University's collection of Kathy Acker papers.

Interviews and conversations

Incomplete list:

  • Interview with Barry Alpert (Mitali Restaurant, pub. in Only Paper Today, March 30, 1976) Published in The Last Interview.
  • "Kathy Acker by Mark Margill" (pub. in BOMB Magazine, July 1, 1983)
  • Informal Interview (with R.J. Ellish, Carolyn Bird, Dawn Curwen, Ian Mancor, Val Ogden, and Charles Patrick, April 23, 1986) Published in The Last Interview.
  • Kathy Acker at the ICA (Part of the Anthony Rolland Collection of Films and Art, Writers in Conversation, 1986)
  • A Conversation with Kathy Acker (with Ellen G. Friedman, Gramercy Park Hotel, NYC, 1 February 1988) Pub. in Review of Contemporary Fiction 9, No. 3 (Fall 1989): 12-22.
  • Conversations with Dean Kulpers (Gramercy Park Hotel Bar, NYC, July 2, 1988). Published in The Last Interview.
  • Devoured by Myths: An Interview with Sylvere Lotringer (New York, Oct 1989 – May 1990, published in Hannibal Lecter My Father) The unexpurgated transcript was published in The Last Interview.
  • "An interview with Kathy Acker" (with Larry McCaffery, pub. in Mississippi Review 20, Nos. 1-2 (1991): 83-97).
  • The On Our Backs Interview: Kathy Acker (with Lisa Palac, May/June 1991). Published in The Last Interview.
  • Kathy Acker Interviewed by Rebecca Deaton (pub. in Textual Practice 6, No. 2 (Summer 1992): 271-82.
  • Body Building (with Laurence A. Rikels, pub. in Artforum, February 1994). Published in The Last Interview.
  • Can't: Walk and chew gum (with Ricahrd Kadrey, from Covert Culture series, pub. in Hotwired online, 13 September 1995)
  • Kathy Acker (in conversation with Beth Jackson, pub. in eyeline, Autumn/Winter 1996). Published in The Last Interview.
  • Strange Gaze interview with Anton Corbijn (1996, source unknown, available at Duke University's collection of Kathy Acker's papers)
  • All Girls Together: Kathy Acker Interviews the Spice Girls (pub. The Guardian, 1997) Published in The Last Interview.
  • The Last Interview (with Kesia Boddy, 1997) Published in The Last Interview.
  • Candle in the Wind (interviewed by Ruben Reyes, Phsycus Room, Issue 3, Summer 1998)
  • Kathy Acker (with Andrea Juno and V. Vale, pub. in Angry Women (RE/Search, 1991: June Books, 1999). Published in The Last Interview.
  • Pussy and the Art of Motor Cycle Maintenance or how to be a pirate on-line and channel your energies so as to remember your dreams... (interviewed by Rosie X, date/magazine unknown)
  • interview with Karl Schieder (July 25, 1991, The Naropa Institute, Boulder, Colorado, pub. in ilato.org, pub date unknown)
  • A Conversation with Kathy Acker (interviewed by Benjamin Bratton (Speed), pub. in Apparatus and Memory, date unknown)
  • Kathy Acker interviews William S. Burroughs (date unknown)

Correspondence

Incomplete list:

  • Spread Open, with artist Paul Buck. Incorporates correspondence between Kathy Acker and Buck from early 80s. Published in 2005 by Dis Voir.
  • I'm Very Into You. A book of Acker's email correspondence with media theorist McKenzie Wark, edited by Matias Viegener, her executor and head of the Kathy Acker Literary Trust. Pub. in 2015, by Semiotext(e).

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Births and Deaths of Kathy Acker - Literary Hub". lithub.com. November 30, 2017. "In her own version of Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations, the narrator, as her Tarot cards—seen as “a psychic map of the present, therefore: the future”—are being read, refers to April 18 as her significator. The birth certificate, driver’s license, and passport of the author give 1947 as birth year, relates Acker’s literary executor, Matias Viegener. Library of Congress information lists 1948, a date her publisher Grove Press takes for a biographical note for a posthumous gathering. In My Mother: Demonology, one of Acker’s last novels published while the author still lived, her narrative strategies have become to redo “childhood,” meaning within the work a set of returned-to memories, dreams, and also the pieces written when younger, the books loved rewritten. Here a narrator, if taken for a stand-in, changes her point of origin again, to something close but that does not exactly square, 'I was born on October 6, 1945.'"
  2. ^ "Kathy Acker in the U.S., Public Records Index, 1950-1993, Volume 1". search.ancestrylibrary.com.
  3. ^ a b c "Guide to the Kathy Acker Notebooks, 1968-1974". Fales Library and Special Collections. New York University. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Kraus, Chris (August 11, 2017). "'Cancer Became My Whole Brain': Kathy Acker's Final Year". The New Yorker.
  5. ^ Turner, Jenny (October 19, 2017), "Literary Friction", London Review of Books, 39 (20): 9–14
  6. ^ "Kathy Acker | American author". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  7. ^ "Kathy Acker, Novelist and Performance Artist, 53". The New York Times. December 3, 1997. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  8. ^ Turner, Jenny (October 18, 2017). "Literary Friction". London Review of Books. 39 (20). Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  9. ^ Stratton, Jon (2008). Jewish Identity in Western Pop Culture: The Holocaust and Trauma Through Modernity. New York City: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 97. ISBN 978-1349372614.
  10. ^ Kraus, Chris (2017). After Kathy Acker. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 9781635900064. Retrieved February 6, 2018.
  11. ^ a b Laing, Olivia (August 31, 2017). "After Kathy Acker by Chris Kraus review – sex, art and a life of myths". theguardian.com.
  12. ^ "Kathy Acker: Critical Essays". eNotes.com.
  13. ^ "The Killers". San Francisco State University. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  14. ^ a b "Kathy Acker's Art of Identity Theft". The New Yorker. November 28, 2022. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
  15. ^ "Littoral Madness" (PDF). MayDay Rooms. Retrieved July 26, 2020.
  16. ^ Wynne-Jones, Ros (September 13, 1997). "Interview: Kathy Acker: Written on the Body". The Independent. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  17. ^ a b "After Kathy Acker: the life and death of a taboo-breaking punk writer". Newstatesman.com. August 28, 2017. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  18. ^ Ware, Susan (2004). Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary Completing the Twentieth Century. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01488-6.
  19. ^ Kathy Acker (January 18, 1997). "The gift of disease". The Guardian (original publisher, posted on Outward from Nothingness). Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  20. ^ Crispin, Jessa (October 2006). "An interview with Neil Gaiman". bookslut.com. Bookslut. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  21. ^ Kraus, Chris (2017). After Kathy Acker. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 9781635900064. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
  22. ^ McCaffery, Larry, and Kathy Acker. "An Interview with Kathy Acker", Mississippi Review, vol. 20, no. 1/2, 1991, pp. 83–97, jstor.org/stable/20134512.
  23. ^ a b c Kraus, Chris (2017). After Kathy Acker. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 9781635900064. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  24. ^ Staff (October 1996). "Brief in English: Kathy Acker in Helsinki". Ylioppilaslehti (student magazine). Helsinki, Finland: University of Helsinki.
  25. ^ Acker, Kathy (1997). Portrait of an Eye: Three Novels. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0802135439. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  26. ^ Hawkins, Susan E. "All in the Family: Kathy Acker's 'Blood and Guts in High School.'" Contemporary Literature, vol. 45, no. 4, 2004, pp. 637–58, jstor.org/stable/3593544
  27. ^ Stevenson, Jack (October 31, 2010). "Haunted Cinema: Movie Theatres of the Dead". Bright Lights Film Journal. 70. Archived from the original on January 19, 2013.
  28. ^ Acker, Kathy; Leatherdale, Marcus (1983). Marcus Leatherdale: His photographs – a book in a series on people and years. Vienna, Austria: Molotov. ISBN 9783950370317. OCLC 719286533.
  29. ^ Kraus, Chris (November 9, 2017). "Kathy Acker's Blood And Guts in High School". The Paris Review.
  30. ^ "Fiction Book Review: Pussy, King of the Pirates". www.publishersweekly.com. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  31. ^ Helbig, Jack (September 18, 1997). "Pussy, King of the Pirates". Chicago Reader. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  32. ^ "Amandla Publishing: Kathy Acker". Amandla. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  33. ^ Acker, Kathy (2002). Rip-Off Red, Girl Detective and The Burning Bombing of America. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0802139205. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  34. ^ Acker, Kathy (2002). Essential Acker. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0802139213. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  35. ^ . NYU News (student newspaper). New York University. October 31, 2002. Archived from the original on March 1, 2010.
  36. ^ Stevens, Andrew (December 28, 2007). "Looking back at Kathy Acker". The Guardian. London, UK.
  37. ^ Scholder, Amy (2006). Lust For Life: On the Writings of Kathy Acker. New York: Verso. ISBN 184467066X. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  38. ^ Crawford, Ashley. "Kathy Acker & McKenzie Wark review: Their emails are fascinating and ghoulish". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  39. ^ "Honoring L.E.S. avant-garde with first annual Acker Awards | The Villager Newspaper". thevillager.com. May 30, 2013. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
  40. ^ Cooke, Rachel (September 4, 2017). "After Kathy Acker: A Biography by Chris Kraus review – baffling life study". Theguardian.com.
  41. ^ Rooney, Kathleen (April 27, 2018). "Three Literary Critics Who Engage With Their Subjects, Unconventionally". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 3, 2022. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  42. ^ "Crudo". olivialaing.co.uk. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  43. ^ "Obituary Spirit: On "Kathy Acker: The Last Interview"". Blog.lareviewofbooks.org. March 12, 2019. Retrieved September 5, 2020.
  44. ^ "I, I, I, I, I, I, I, Kathy Acker". Institute of Contemporary Arts. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
  45. ^ . Amazon. Archived from the original on April 30, 2019. Retrieved May 9, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  46. ^ Wenner, Niko (March 2009). "About "Acker Sound/Read All Over" (blog)". myspace.com/nikowenner/blog. Myspace. Archived from the original on November 30, 2012.

Further reading

  • "no one can find little girls any more: Kathy Acker in Australia" (1997). Documentary film by Jonathan and Felicity Dawson. Griffith University, 90 minutes. Footage from this film is included in
  • Devouring Institutions: The Life Work of Kathy Acker, ed. Michael Hardin (Hyperbole/San Diego State University Press: 2004).
  • Lust for Life: On the Writings of Kathy Acker, ed. Carla Harryman, Avital Ronell, and Amy Scholder (Verso, 2006)
  • Kathy Acker and Transnationalism, ed. Polina Mackay and Kathryn Nicol (Cambridge Scholars, 2009)
  • I'm Very into You: Correspondence 1995--1996, by Kathy Acker and McKenzie Wark, edited by Matias Viegener (Semiotext(e), 2017)
  • After Kathy Acker: A Literary Biography, by Chris Kraus (Semiotext(e), 2017)
  • Pérez, Rolando. "What is Don Quijote/Don Quixote And…And…And the Disjunctive Synthesis of Cervantes and Kathy Acker", Cervantes ilimitado: cuatrocientos años del Quijote. Ed. Nuria Morgado. ALDEEU, 2016. pp. 75–100.

External links

kathy, acker, april, 1947, disputed, november, 1997, american, experimental, novelist, playwright, essayist, postmodernist, writer, known, idiosyncratic, transgressive, writing, that, dealt, with, themes, such, childhood, trauma, sexuality, rebellion, influenc. Kathy Acker April 18 1947 2 disputed November 30 1997 was an American experimental novelist playwright essayist and postmodernist writer known for her idiosyncratic and transgressive writing that dealt with themes such as childhood trauma sexuality and rebellion She was influenced by the Black Mountain School poets William S Burroughs David Antin Carolee Schneeman Eleanor Antin French critical theory mysticism and pornography 3 as well as classic literature Kathy AckerAcker in 1996BornKaren Lehman 1947 04 18 April 18 1947 disputed 1 New York City New York U S DiedNovember 30 1997 1997 11 30 aged 50 Tijuana Baja California MexicoOccupationNovelist playwright essayist poetCitizenshipUnited StatesNotable worksBlood and Guts in High School novel Great ExpectationsNew York short story Notable awardsPushcart Prize 1979 SpouseRobert Acker 1966 19 Peter Gordon 1976 annulled Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education 1 3 Start of career and relationships 1 4 Later life and death 2 Literary overview 3 Posthumous reputation 4 Bibliography 4 1 Novels stories 4 2 Poetry 4 3 Stage work 4 4 Screenplay 4 5 Recordings music collabs 4 6 Essays periodicals book reviews movie reviews art reviews speeches and other texts 4 7 Interviews and conversations 4 8 Correspondence 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit The only child of Donald and Claire nee Weill Lehman Acker was born Karen Lehman in New York City in 1947 4 5 although the Library of Congress gives her birth year as 1948 while the editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica gave her birth year as April 18 1948 New York New York U S and died November 30 1997 Tijuana Mexico 6 Most obituaries including The New York Times cited her birth year as 1944 7 Her family was from a wealthy assimilated German Jewish background that was culturally but not religiously Jewish Her paternal grandmother Florence Weill was an Austrian Jew who had inherited a small fortune from her husband s glove making business 8 Acker s grandparents went into political exile from Alsace Lorraine prior to World War I due to the rising nationalism of pre Nazi Germany moving to Paris and then to the United States According to Acker her grandparents were first generation French German Jews whose ancestors originally hailed from the Pale of Settlement In an interview with the magazine Tattoo Jew Acker stated that religious Judaism means nothing to me I don t run away from it it just means nothing to me and elaborated that her parents were high German Jews who held cultural prejudices against Yiddish speaking Eastern European Jews I was trained to run away from Polish Jews 9 The pregnancy was unplanned Donald Lehman abandoned the family before Karen s birth Her relationship with her domineering mother even into adulthood was fraught with hostility and anxiety because Acker felt unloved and unwanted Her mother soon remarried to Albert Alexander whose surname Karen was given although the writer later described her mother s union with Alexander as a passionless marriage to an ineffectual man Karen later Kathy had a half sister Wendy by her mother s second marriage but the two women were never close and long estranged By the time of Kathy s death she had requested that her friends not contact Wendy as some had suggested 10 Acker was raised in her mother and stepfather s home in the Sutton Place neighborhood of Manhattan s prosperous Upper East Side In 1978 Claire Alexander Karen s mother committed suicide 11 12 As an adult Acker tried to track down her father but abandoned her search after she discovered that her father had disappeared after killing a trespasser on his yacht and spending six months in a psychiatric asylum until the state excused him of murder charges 13 Education Edit Acker attended the Birch Wathen Lenox School a private school for girls on the Upper East Side 14 As an undergraduate at Brandeis University she studied Classics and took advantage of loosened mores attending orgies thrown by theatre kids 14 In 1966 she married Robert Acker and took his surname Robert Acker was the son of lower middle class Polish Jewish immigrants Her mother and stepfather had hoped she would marry a wealthy man and did not expect the marriage to Acker to last long 15 She became interested in writing novels and with Robert moved to California to attend University of California San Diego where David Antin Eleanor Antin and Jerome Rothenberg were among her teachers She received her bachelor s degree in 1968 After moving to New York she attended two years of graduate school at the City University of New York in Classics specializing in Greek She did not earn a graduate degree During her time in New York she was employed as a file clerk secretary stripper and porn performer 3 Start of career and relationships Edit Although her birth name was Karen she was known as Kathy to her friends and family Her first work appeared in print as part of the burgeoning New York City literary underground of the mid 1970s During the 1970s Acker often moved back and forth between San Diego San Francisco and New York She married the composer and experimental musician Peter Gordon shortly before the end of their seven year relationship 16 Later she had relationships with the theorist publisher and critic Sylvere Lotringer and then with the filmmaker and film theorist Peter Wollen 17 In 1996 Acker left San Francisco and moved to London to live with the writer and music critic Charles Shaar Murray 4 She married twice She was openly bisexual In 1979 she won the Pushcart Prize for her short story New York City in 1979 During the early 1980s she lived in London where she wrote several of her most critically acclaimed works After returning to the United States in the late 1980s she worked as an adjunct professor at the San Francisco Art Institute for about six years and as a visiting professor at several universities including the University of Idaho the University of California San Diego UC San Diego University of California Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara the California Institute of Arts and Roanoke College 18 Later life and death Edit In April 1996 Acker was diagnosed with breast cancer and she elected to have a double mastectomy In January 1997 she wrote about her loss of faith in conventional medicine in a Guardian article The Gift of Disease 19 In the article she explains that after unsuccessful surgery which left her feeling physically mutilated and emotionally debilitated she rejected the passivity of the patient in the medical mainstream and began to seek out the advice of nutritionists acupuncturists psychic healers and Chinese herbalists She found appealing the claim that instead of being an object of knowledge as in Western medicine the patient becomes a seer a seeker of wisdom that illness becomes the teacher and the patient the student After pursuing several forms of alternative medicine in England and the United States Acker died a year and a half later on November 30 1997 aged 50 from complications of cancer in a Tijuana alternative cancer clinic the only alternative treatment facility that accepted her with her advanced stage of cancer 4 She died in what was called Room 101 to which her friend Alan Moore quipped There s nothing that woman can t turn into a literary reference Room 101 in the climax of George Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four turns out to be the torture chamber in which the Inner Party subjects its political prisoners to their own worst fears 20 Literary overview EditAcker was associated with the New York punk movement of the late 1970s and early 1980s The punk aesthetic influenced her literary style 21 In the 1970s before the term postmodernism was popular Acker began writing her books These books contain features that would eventually be considered postmodernist work 22 Her controversial body of work borrows heavily from the experimental styles of William S Burroughs and Marguerite Duras Her writing strategies at times used forms of pastiche and deployed Burroughs s cut up technique involving cutting up and scrambling passages and sentences into a somewhat random remix Acker defined her writing as existing post nouveau roman European tradition 23 In her texts she combines biographical elements power sex and violence Indeed critics often compare her writing to that of Alain Robbe Grillet and Jean Genet Critics have noticed links to Gertrude Stein and photographers Cindy Sherman and Sherrie Levine Acker s novels also exhibit a fascination with and an indebtedness to tattoos 24 She dedicated Empire of the Senseless to her tattooist Acker published her first book Politics in 1972 Although the collection of poems and essays did not garner much critical or public attention it did establish her reputation within the New York punk scene In 1973 she published her first novel under the pseudonym Black Tarantula The Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula Some Lives of Murderesses The following year she published her second novel I Dreamt I Was a Nymphomaniac Imagining Both works are reprinted in Portrait of an Eye 25 In 1979 she received popular attention after winning a Pushcart Prize for her short story New York City in 1979 She did not receive critical attention however until publishing Great Expectations in 1982 The opening of Great Expectations is an obvious re writing of Charles Dickens s work of the same name It features her usual subject matter including a semi autobiographical account of her mother s suicide and the appropriation of several other texts including Pierre Guyotat s violent and sexually explicit Eden Eden Eden That same year Acker published a chapbook entitled Hello I m Erica Jong 23 She appropriated from a number of influential writers These writers include Charles Dickens Nathaniel Hawthorne John Keats William Faulkner T S Eliot the Bronte sisters the Marquis de Sade Georges Bataille and Arthur Rimbaud 26 Acker wrote the script for the 1983 film Variety 27 Acker wrote a text on the photographer Marcus Leatherdale that was published in 1983 in an art catalogue for the Molotov Gallery in Vienna 28 In 1984 Acker s first British publication the novel Blood and Guts in High School was published soon after its publication by Grove Press in New York 29 That same year she was signed by Grove Press one of the legendary independent publishers committed to controversial and avant garde writing she was one of the last writers taken on by Barney Rosset before the end of his tenure there Most of her work was published by them including re issues of important earlier work She wrote for several magazines and anthologies including the periodicals RE Search Angel Exhaust monochrom and Rapid Eye As she neared the end of her life her work was more well received by the conventional press for example The Guardian published a number of her essays interviews and articles among them was an interview with the Spice Girls 3 In Memoriam to Identity draws attention to popular analyses of Rimbaud s life and The Sound and the Fury constructing or revealing social and literary identity Although known in the literary world for creating a whole new style of feminist prose and for her transgressive fiction she was also a punk and feminist icon for her devoted portrayals of subcultures strong willed women and violence 23 Notwithstanding the increased recognition she garnered for Great Expectations Blood and Guts in High School is often considered Acker s breakthrough work Published in 1984 it is one of her most extreme explorations of sexuality and violence Borrowing from among other texts Nathaniel Hawthorne s The Scarlet Letter Blood and Guts details the experiences of Janey Smith a sex addicted and pelvic inflammatory disease ridden urbanite who is in love with a father who sells her into slavery Many critics criticized it for being demeaning toward women and Germany banned it completely Acker published the German court judgment against Blood and Guts in High School in Hannibal Lecter My Father Acker published Empire of the Senseless in 1988 and considered it a turning point in her writing While she still borrows from other texts including Mark Twain s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn the appropriation is less obvious However one of Acker s more controversial appropriations is from William Gibson s 1984 text Neuromancer in which Acker equates code with the female body and its militaristic implications In 1988 she published Literal Madness Three Novels which included three previously published works Florida deconstructs and reduces John Huston s 1948 film noir Key Largo into its base sexual politics Kathy Goes to Haiti details a young woman s relationship and sexual exploits while on vacation and My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini provides a fictional autobiography of the Italian filmmaker in which he solves his own murder citation needed Between 1990 and 1993 she published four more books In Memoriam to Identity 1990 Hannibal Lecter My Father 1991 Portrait of an Eye Three Novels 1992 also composed of already published works and My Mother Demonology 1992 Her last novel Pussy King of the Pirates was published in 1996 30 which she Rico Bell and the rest of rock band the Mekons also reworked into an operetta which they performed at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago in 1997 31 In 2007 Amandla Publishing re published Acker s articles that she wrote for the New Statesman from 1989 to 1991 32 Grove Press published two unpublished early novellas in the volume Rip Off Red Girl Detective and The Burning Bombing of America and a collection of selected work Essential Acker edited by Amy Scholder and Dennis Cooper in 2002 33 34 Three volumes of her non fiction have been published and republished since her death In 2002 New York University staged Discipline and Anarchy a retrospective exhibition of her works 35 while in 2008 London s Institute of Contemporary Arts screened an evening of films influenced by Acker 36 Posthumous reputation EditA collection of essays on Acker s work titled Lust for Life On the Writings of Kathy Acker edited by Carla Harryman Avital Ronell and Amy Scholder was published by Verso in 2006 and includes essays by Nayland Blake Leslie Dick Robert Gluck Carla Harryman Laurence Rickels Avital Ronell Barrett Watten and Peter Wollen 37 In 2009 the first collection of essays to focus on academic study of Acker Kathy Acker and Transnationalism was published In 2015 Semiotext e published I m Very Into You a book of Acker s email correspondence with media theorist McKenzie Wark edited by Matias Viegener her executor and head of the Kathy Acker Literary Trust 38 Her personal library is housed in a reading room at the University of Cologne in Germany and her papers are divided between NYU s Fales Library and the Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Duke University A limited body of her recorded readings and discussions of her works exists in the special collections archive of University of California San Diego In 2013 the Acker Award was launched and named for Kathy Acker Awarded to living and deceased members of the San Francisco or New York avant garde art scene the award is financed by Alan Kaufman and Clayton Patterson 39 In 2017 American writer and artist Chris Kraus published After Kathy Acker A Literary Biography the first book length biography of Acker s life experiences and literary strategies 11 40 17 American writer Douglas A Martin published Acker a book length study of Acker s influences and artistic trajectory 41 In 2018 British writer Olivia Laing published Crudo a novel which references Acker s works and life and whose main character is a woman called Kathy suffering double breast cancer yet book s events are situated in August September 2017 42 In 2019 Amy Scholder and Douglas A Martin co edited Kathy Acker The Last Interview and Other Conversations 43 Kate Zambreno wrote on Kathy Acker in her essay New York City Summer 2013 published as part of the collection Screen Tests Harpers Collins 2019 The essay was originally published in Icon edited by Amy Scholder Feminist Press 2014 Between May 1 2019 and August 4 2019 the exhibition I I I I I I I Kathy Acker was held at the Institute of Contemporary Arts London The exhibition featured works by more than 40 artists such as Reza Abdoh Johanna Hedva and Reba Maybury 44 In 2020 Grove Press issued a new edition of Portrait of an Eye with an introduction by Kate Zambreno Bibliography EditNovels stories Edit Politics 1972 excerpts published in Hannibal Lecter My Father 1991 full text published in Kathy Acker 1971 1975 2019 The Burning Bombing of America The Destruction of the United States pub 2002 from manuscript 1972 Rip Off Red Girl Detective pub 2002 from manuscript 1973 Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula By the Black Tarantula 1973 I Dreamt I Was a Nymphomaniac Imagining 1974 Haiti A Trip to the Voodoo Doctor Travelers Digest Issue 1 Volume 1 1977 later published in Kathy Goes to Haiti Adult Life of Toulouse Lautrec 1978 Florida 1978 Kathy Goes To Haiti 1978 The Seattle Book For Randy and Heather 1980 with illustrations The Persian Poems by Janey Smith Travelers Digest Issue 2 Volume 1 ed Jeff Goldberg 1980 poems from Blood and Guts in High School with drawings by Robert Kushner 1980 N Y C in 1979 1981 Hello My Name Is Erica Jong 1982 also available in Blood and Guts in High School Translations of the Diaries of Laure the Schoolgirl 1983 Implosion 1983 also available in My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini Great Expectations 1983 Algeria A Series of Invocations Because Nothing Else Works 1984 My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini 1984 Blood and Guts in High School 1984 Don Quixote Which Was a Dream 1986 Lust A Sailor s Slight Identity 1987 available in Hannibal Lecter My Father Literal Madness Three Novels Reprinted 1987 contains Kathy Goes to Haiti My Death My Life by Pier Paolo Pasolini Florida Young Lust 1988 contains Kathy Goes to Haiti The Adult Life of Toulouse Lautrec by Henri Toulouse Lautrec and Florida Empire of the Senseless 1988 In Memoriam to Identity 1990 Hannibal Lecter My Father 1991 Portrait of an Eye 1992 includes early novels Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula By the Black Tarantula 1973 I Dreamt I Was a Nymphomaniac Imagining 1974 Adult Life of Toulouse Lautrec 1978 My Mother Demonology 1994 Pussycat Fever with Diane Dimassa and Freddie Baer illustrators 1995 Pussy King of the Pirates 1996 Portrait of an Eye Three Novels Reprinted 1998 Eurydice in the Underworld 1998 Essential Acker The Selected Writings of Kathy Acker 2002 45 New York City in 1979 2018 Penguin Modern Kathy Acker 1971 1975 2019 Editions Ismael 656 pgs ed Justin Gajoux and Claire Finch critical edition of unpublished early writings from 1971 to 1975Some of the contents from Kathy Acker 1971 1975 2019 Editions Ismael 656 pgs ed Justin Gajoux and Claire Finch critical edition of unpublished early writings from 1971 to 1975 The Golden Woman poem 1969 1970 Section from DIARY 1 2 1971 Portraits 7 1971 Portraits and Visions summer 1971 Diary Warmcatfur 1 1972 Politics 1972 full text For H 1972 Revolutionary Diary of an Anarchist 1972 Journal Black Cats Black Jewels summer 1972 Gold Songs for Jimi Hendrix 1972 Breaking Up summer 1972 Letter to Berndadette Mayer fall 1972 Entrance into Dwelling in Paradise poems fall 1972 Exercises fall 1972 Stripper Disintergration 2 3 1973 Section from Diary 3 1973 Letter to Bernadette Mayer 1973 The Beginning of the Thesmophoriazusae 7 9 1973 Part I of Breaking Through Memories into Desire 11 1973 Part II of Breaking Through Memories 1 1974 Conversations 1 1974 Letters to Alan Sondheim 2 3 1974 Letter to Bernadette Mayer 3 3 1974 Poetry Edit This is not a complete list This symbol indicates published in Kathy Acker 1971 1975 2019 Editions Ismael 656 pgs ed Justin Gajoux and Claire Finch critical edition of unpublished early writings from 1971 to 1975 The Golden Woman poem 1969 1970 Journal Black Cats Black Jewels summer 1972 Gold Songs for Jimi Hendrix 1972 Part I of Breaking Through Memories into Desire 11 1973 Part II of Breaking Through Memories 1 1974 Baby don t give baby don t get from the novel Florida Homage to Leroi Jones poems pub 2015 by Lost and Found The CUNY Poetics Documents Initiative from manuscript 1972 Discussion reading of two poems from the novel Blood and Guts in High School Stage work Edit Desire Bomb 3 spring 1982 Lulu Unchained drama 1985 first performed at ICA available in the novel Don Quixote Which Was a Dream The Birth of the Poet drama 1981 performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in 1985 directed by Richard Foreman published in Eurydice in the Underworld also in Wordplays 5 An Anthology of New American Drama 1987 Requiem drama 1997 published in Eurydice in the Underworld Screenplay Edit Variety screenplay 1985 directed by Bette Gordon unpublished Recordings music collabs Edit Pussy 1994 produced by CodeX contains two sections O and Ange and Pussy King of the Pirates Her Story The Stabbing Hand 1995 spoken word guest appearance on alternate mix of song by Oxbow included on reissues of album Let Me Be a Woman 46 Pussy King of the Pirates 1997 Touch and Go Records Acker s operetta performed and recorded by the Mekons with Kathy Acker Redoing Childhood 2000 spoken word recording KRS 349 Essays periodicals book reviews movie reviews art reviews speeches and other texts Edit This is not a complete list The symbols indicate it s available at Duke University s collection of Kathy Acker s papers The symbol indicates the essay is included in the Kathy Acker collection Bodies of Work Essays London Serpent s Tail 1997 Notes on Writing from the Life of Baudelaire 1979 New York City 1983 from Marcus Leatherdale His photographs a book in a series on people and years with Christian Michelides published by Wien Molotov 1983 Realism for the Cause of Future Revolution from Art After Modernism Rethinking Representation 1984 Collette 1985 An Actual Institution of Art 1986 Introduction to collection Young Lust 1988 Introduction to Boxcar Bertha 1988 A Few Notes on Two of my Books from Review of Contemporary Fiction vol 9 no 3 Fall 1989 Blue Valentine 1989 Review of Scandal for Weiner 1989 Low Good and Evil in the Work of Nayland Blake 1990 A selection is available in the Kathy Acker collection Body of Works Essays The World According to Peter Greenway from The Village Voice vol 35 April 17 1990 In the Underworld 1990 William Burroughs Realism 1990 From Counter Culture to Culture But Here s no Culture Fuck Ecology and the Death of Communism The Meaning of the 80s 1990 New York City 25 12 89 31 12 89 at the Edge of the New 1990 The Language of Sex The Sex of Language 1990 Critical Languages 1990 Dead Doll Humility 1990 The Meaning of the Eighties from The Village Voice vol 35 January 2 1990 Bodybuilding 1991 The War at Home Bonfire of the Vanities by Brian de Palma 1991 Red Wings Concerning Richard Prince s Spiritual America from Parkett 1992 Against Ordinary Language The Language of the Body from The Last Sex Feminism and Outlaw Bodies 1993 Reading the Lack of the Body The Writing of the Marquis de Sade from The Divine Sade 1994 After the End of the Art World 1994 Statements on the Nature of Musical Comedy 1994 Seeing Gender from Critical Quarterly 1995 Running through the World On the Art of Kiki Smith 1995 Mirror Two Works of Art 1995 Moving Into Wonder An introduction to Time Capsule A Concise Encyclopedia by Women Artists 1995 Unidentified contribution to Dust Essays 1995 Writing Identity and Copyright in the Net Age from MMLA vol 28 no 1 Spring 1995 Samuel Delaney Orpheus 1996 On Delany the Magiian Foreword to Trouble on Triton 1996 The Future 1997 The Gift of the Disease The Guardian January 18 1997 Bruce Willis and Me 1997 Bodies of Work Essays 1997 Includes a preface Any essay with symbol indicates it is included in this collection Acker Articles from The New Statesman 1989 1991 2007 Amandla Publishing Russian Constructivism from Blasted Allegories date unknown Notes on a title page of Herman Melville s White Jacket Undated Some American Cities from Marxism Today date unknown Postmoderism undated About Robert Mapplethorpe undated Allen Ginsberg A Personal Portrait undated A Bunch of Propositions about the Hernandez Brothers undated On Twin Peaks undated Women who have Big Muscles undated The End of Poetry undated Eugenie De Franval undated Fabre s Work or Opera undated Unidentified essay part of the Iain Sinclair inventory Book reviews typescripts of sixteen different reviews from 1985 to 1989 available at Duke University s collection of Kathy Acker papers Interviews and conversations Edit Incomplete list Interview with Barry Alpert Mitali Restaurant pub in Only Paper Today March 30 1976 Published in The Last Interview Kathy Acker by Mark Margill pub in BOMB Magazine July 1 1983 Informal Interview with R J Ellish Carolyn Bird Dawn Curwen Ian Mancor Val Ogden and Charles Patrick April 23 1986 Published in The Last Interview Kathy Acker at the ICA Part of the Anthony Rolland Collection of Films and Art Writers in Conversation 1986 A Conversation with Kathy Acker with Ellen G Friedman Gramercy Park Hotel NYC 1 February 1988 Pub in Review of Contemporary Fiction 9 No 3 Fall 1989 12 22 Conversations with Dean Kulpers Gramercy Park Hotel Bar NYC July 2 1988 Published in The Last Interview Devoured by Myths An Interview with Sylvere Lotringer New York Oct 1989 May 1990 published in Hannibal Lecter My Father The unexpurgated transcript was published in The Last Interview An interview with Kathy Acker with Larry McCaffery pub in Mississippi Review 20 Nos 1 2 1991 83 97 The On Our Backs Interview Kathy Acker with Lisa Palac May June 1991 Published in The Last Interview Kathy Acker Interviewed by Rebecca Deaton pub in Textual Practice 6 No 2 Summer 1992 271 82 Body Building with Laurence A Rikels pub in Artforum February 1994 Published in The Last Interview Can t Walk and chew gum with Ricahrd Kadrey from Covert Culture series pub in Hotwired online 13 September 1995 Kathy Acker in conversation with Beth Jackson pub in eyeline Autumn Winter 1996 Published in The Last Interview Strange Gaze interview with Anton Corbijn 1996 source unknown available at Duke University s collection of Kathy Acker s papers All Girls Together Kathy Acker Interviews the Spice Girls pub The Guardian 1997 Published in The Last Interview The Last Interview with Kesia Boddy 1997 Published in The Last Interview Candle in the Wind interviewed by Ruben Reyes Phsycus Room Issue 3 Summer 1998 Kathy Acker with Andrea Juno and V Vale pub in Angry Women RE Search 1991 June Books 1999 Published in The Last Interview Pussy and the Art of Motor Cycle Maintenance or how to be a pirate on line and channel your energies so as to remember your dreams interviewed by Rosie X date magazine unknown interview with Karl Schieder July 25 1991 The Naropa Institute Boulder Colorado pub in ilato org pub date unknown A Conversation with Kathy Acker interviewed by Benjamin Bratton Speed pub in Apparatus and Memory date unknown Kathy Acker interviews William S Burroughs date unknown Correspondence Edit Incomplete list Spread Open with artist Paul Buck Incorporates correspondence between Kathy Acker and Buck from early 80s Published in 2005 by Dis Voir I m Very Into You A book of Acker s email correspondence with media theorist McKenzie Wark edited by Matias Viegener her executor and head of the Kathy Acker Literary Trust Pub in 2015 by Semiotext e See also Edit Poetry portal LGBT portal Biography portalPostmodern feminismReferences Edit The Births and Deaths of Kathy Acker Literary Hub lithub com November 30 2017 In her own version of Charles Dickens s Great Expectations the narrator as her Tarot cards seen as a psychic map of the present therefore the future are being read refers to April 18 as her significator The birth certificate driver s license and passport of the author give 1947 as birth year relates Acker s literary executor Matias Viegener Library of Congress information lists 1948 a date her publisher Grove Press takes for a biographical note for a posthumous gathering In My Mother Demonology one of Acker s last novels published while the author still lived her narrative strategies have become to redo childhood meaning within the work a set of returned to memories dreams and also the pieces written when younger the books loved rewritten Here a narrator if taken for a stand in changes her point of origin again to something close but that does not exactly square I was born on October 6 1945 Kathy Acker in the U S Public Records Index 1950 1993 Volume 1 search ancestrylibrary com a b c Guide to the Kathy Acker Notebooks 1968 1974 Fales Library and Special Collections New York University Retrieved August 12 2017 a b c Kraus Chris August 11 2017 Cancer Became My Whole Brain Kathy Acker s Final Year The New Yorker Turner Jenny October 19 2017 Literary Friction London Review of Books 39 20 9 14 Kathy Acker American author Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved April 30 2019 Kathy Acker Novelist and Performance Artist 53 The New York Times December 3 1997 Retrieved August 5 2017 Turner Jenny October 18 2017 Literary Friction London Review of Books 39 20 Retrieved September 7 2019 Stratton Jon 2008 Jewish Identity in Western Pop Culture The Holocaust and Trauma Through Modernity New York City Palgrave Macmillan p 97 ISBN 978 1349372614 Kraus Chris 2017 After Kathy Acker Cambridge MIT Press ISBN 9781635900064 Retrieved February 6 2018 a b Laing Olivia August 31 2017 After Kathy Acker by Chris Kraus review sex art and a life of myths theguardian com Kathy Acker Critical Essays eNotes com The Killers San Francisco State University Retrieved September 7 2019 a b Kathy Acker s Art of Identity Theft The New Yorker November 28 2022 Retrieved November 28 2022 Littoral Madness PDF MayDay Rooms Retrieved July 26 2020 Wynne Jones Ros September 13 1997 Interview Kathy Acker Written on the Body The Independent Retrieved August 12 2017 a b After Kathy Acker the life and death of a taboo breaking punk writer Newstatesman com August 28 2017 Retrieved January 12 2018 Ware Susan 2004 Notable American Women A Biographical Dictionary Completing the Twentieth Century Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01488 6 Kathy Acker January 18 1997 The gift of disease The Guardian original publisher posted on Outward from Nothingness Retrieved September 27 2017 Crispin Jessa October 2006 An interview with Neil Gaiman bookslut com Bookslut Retrieved August 4 2017 Kraus Chris 2017 After Kathy Acker Cambridge MIT Press ISBN 9781635900064 Retrieved August 12 2017 McCaffery Larry and Kathy Acker An Interview with Kathy Acker Mississippi Review vol 20 no 1 2 1991 pp 83 97 jstor org stable 20134512 a b c Kraus Chris 2017 After Kathy Acker Cambridge MIT Press ISBN 9781635900064 Retrieved January 12 2018 Staff October 1996 Brief in English Kathy Acker in Helsinki Ylioppilaslehti student magazine Helsinki Finland University of Helsinki Acker Kathy 1997 Portrait of an Eye Three Novels New York Grove Press ISBN 0802135439 Retrieved January 12 2018 Hawkins Susan E All in the Family Kathy Acker s Blood and Guts in High School Contemporary Literature vol 45 no 4 2004 pp 637 58 jstor org stable 3593544 Stevenson Jack October 31 2010 Haunted Cinema Movie Theatres of the Dead Bright Lights Film Journal 70 Archived from the original on January 19 2013 Acker Kathy Leatherdale Marcus 1983 Marcus Leatherdale His photographs a book in a series on people and years Vienna Austria Molotov ISBN 9783950370317 OCLC 719286533 Kraus Chris November 9 2017 Kathy Acker s Blood And Guts in High School The Paris Review Fiction Book Review Pussy King of the Pirates www publishersweekly com Retrieved January 15 2020 Helbig Jack September 18 1997 Pussy King of the Pirates Chicago Reader Retrieved May 13 2020 Amandla Publishing Kathy Acker Amandla Retrieved October 12 2017 Acker Kathy 2002 Rip Off Red Girl Detective and The Burning Bombing of America New York Grove Press ISBN 0802139205 Retrieved January 12 2018 Acker Kathy 2002 Essential Acker New York Grove Press ISBN 0802139213 Retrieved January 12 2018 Press release Discipline and Anarchy The Works of Kathy Acker NYU News student newspaper New York University October 31 2002 Archived from the original on March 1 2010 Stevens Andrew December 28 2007 Looking back at Kathy Acker The Guardian London UK Scholder Amy 2006 Lust For Life On the Writings of Kathy Acker New York Verso ISBN 184467066X Retrieved January 12 2018 Crawford Ashley Kathy Acker amp McKenzie Wark review Their emails are fascinating and ghoulish The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved August 4 2017 Honoring L E S avant garde with first annual Acker Awards The Villager Newspaper thevillager com May 30 2013 Retrieved November 9 2018 Cooke Rachel September 4 2017 After Kathy Acker A Biography by Chris Kraus review baffling life study Theguardian com Rooney Kathleen April 27 2018 Three Literary Critics Who Engage With Their Subjects Unconventionally The New York Times Archived from the original on January 3 2022 Retrieved March 6 2021 Crudo olivialaing co uk Retrieved December 19 2018 Obituary Spirit On Kathy Acker The Last Interview Blog lareviewofbooks org March 12 2019 Retrieved September 5 2020 I I I I I I I Kathy Acker Institute of Contemporary Arts Retrieved February 25 2021 Archived copy Amazon Archived from the original on April 30 2019 Retrieved May 9 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Wenner Niko March 2009 About Acker Sound Read All Over blog myspace com nikowenner blog Myspace Archived from the original on November 30 2012 Further reading Edit no one can find little girls any more Kathy Acker in Australia 1997 Documentary film by Jonathan and Felicity Dawson Griffith University 90 minutes Footage from this film is included in Who s Afraid of Kathy Acker A documentary by Barbara Caspar Devouring Institutions The Life Work of Kathy Acker ed Michael Hardin Hyperbole San Diego State University Press 2004 DEVOURING INSTITUTIONS Lust for Life On the Writings of Kathy Acker ed Carla Harryman Avital Ronell and Amy Scholder Verso 2006 Kathy Acker and Transnationalism ed Polina Mackay and Kathryn Nicol Cambridge Scholars 2009 I m Very into You Correspondence 1995 1996 by Kathy Acker and McKenzie Wark edited by Matias Viegener Semiotext e 2017 After Kathy Acker A Literary Biography by Chris Kraus Semiotext e 2017 Perez Rolando What is Don Quijote Don Quixote And And And the Disjunctive Synthesis of Cervantes and Kathy Acker Cervantes ilimitado cuatrocientos anos del Quijote Ed Nuria Morgado ALDEEU 2016 pp 75 100 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Kathy Acker Magill Mark Summer 1983 Artists in Conversation Kathy Acker BOMB Vol 6 Kathy Acker host and William S Burroughs guest July 14 2011 Kathy Acker interviews William S Burroughs at the October Gallery London 1988 Part 1 Video magivanga com via YouTube Part 2 Part 3 Friedman Ellen G Fall 1989 A Conversation with Kathy Acker The Review of Contemporary Fiction Dalkey Archive Press 9 3 Acker Kathy May 3 1997 All Together Now The Guardian Archived from the original on February 24 2014 Retrieved February 24 2014 Acker interview with the Spice Girls Sirius R U December 1997 Kathy Acker Where does she get off io magazine the digital magazine of literary culture college magazine Vol 2 North Atlantic Books Macaulay Scott January 29 2008 Rotterdam Who s Afraid of Kathy Acker review Filmmaker Magazine Independent Filmmaker Project Acker Kathy Summer 2009 Writing as Magic in London in Its Summer Iain Sinclair and the Crafting of Place Vertigo Close Up Film Centre 4 3 Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved February 24 2014 Kathy Acker recordings ubu com UbuWeb Sound Archived from the original on January 4 2012 Retrieved January 2 2012 Kathy Acker recordings writing upenn edu PennSound Works by or about Kathy Acker in libraries WorldCat catalog Kathy Acker Papers 1972 1997 and undated at Duke University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kathy Acker amp oldid 1140849373, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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