Description

Book Synopsis

Writing otherwise is a collection of essays by established feminist and cultural critics interested in experimenting with new styles of expression. Leading figures in their field, such as Marianne Hirsch, Lynne Pearce, Griselda Pollock, Carol Smart, Jackie Stacey and Janet Wolff, all risk new ways of writing about themselves and their subjects.

Aimed at both general and academic readers interested in how scholarly writing might be more innovative and creative, this collection introduces the personal, the poetic and the experimental into the frame of cultural criticism. This collection of essays is highly interdisciplinary and contributes to debates in sociology, history, anthropology, art history, cultural and media studies and gender studies.



Trade Review

This exciting and innovative collection presses up against the limits of what scholarship can be and its contributors are not afraid to pause where necessary to explore and describe those limits. The turn to the personal that has been so important for feminist and queer criticism is just one of the many richly varied voices and styles through which they insist on experimental writing not as a departure from scholarship but as itself a critical method. Moreover, their attention to writing offers unexpected vantage points on affect theory, including such elusive categories as sensation, mood, and atmosphere. Reading Writing otherwise feels at once enabling and deeply pleasurable.

Ann Cvetkovich, Ellen Clayton Garwood Centennial Professor of English and Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Texas at Austin

In this fascinating collection diverse scholars introduce readers to the imaginative resources liberated by writing somewhat aslant of conventional disciplinary guidelines. The essays highlight intense personal engagements, present intriguing visual imagery or in other ways depict the poetic and elusive resonance of emotions. It is reassuring and delightful to read these lucid essays, confirming once more the potential for working creatively in academia, especially when choosing to trouble its traditional styles and frameworks.
Lynne Segal, author of Out of Time: The Pleasures & Perils of Ageing

The essays in Writing otherwise provide indispensable models for academics attempting to combine theoretical savvy with readable, inventive prose.

Susan Gubar, Distinguished Professor Emerita of English at Indiana University, writes the ‘Living with Cancer’ blog in The New York Times


Writing otherwise grabbed me by the collar and pulled me into a world where I wouldn’t have minded staying. In this innovative collection, ‘writing otherwise’ is always sutured to ‘knowing otherwise’, whether historically (through use of memoir and fiction), textually (through playing with form and voice), or via the body (through touch and engagement with others). Drawing on the venerable feminist and queer traditions of interdisciplinarity and intersubjectivity, this collection shows us the difference that writing otherwise makes: it keeps the writer open to new ways of knowing; pulls her back to the past to see the future anew; forces a confrontation with dislocation and mortality; and yet marries loss and optimism in shifting cartographies of difference. Writing otherwise is an invitation to respond in kind in one’s own work, an invitation I now feel better equipped to accept.

Clare Hemmings, Professor of Feminist Theory, at LSE's Gender Institute

-- .

Table of Contents

Writing otherwise - Jackie Stacey and Janet Wolff
Affects
Writing from the heart - Griselda Pollock
Contact - Mary Cappello
On being open to others: cosmopolitanism and the psychoanalysis of groups - Jackie Stacey
Touching lives: writing the sociological and the personal - Carol Smart
Displacements
Atlantic moves - Janet Wolff
Autopia: in search of what we're thinking when we're driving - Lynne Pearce
Cheap chickens and ethical eggs: the place of an English village in the world - Vron Ware
If the shoe fits: appropriating identity? - Brenda Cooper
Dust and mangoes: plain tales and hill stations - Margaret Beetham
Poetics
Bliss (opera's untenable pleasures) - Monica B. Pearl
Graphic to surface: textual effects and criticism - Judy Kendall
First person, plural: notes on voice and collaboration - Marianne Hirsch and Leo Spitzer

Writing Otherwise: Experiments in Cultural

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Jackie Stacey, Janet Wolff

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      View other formats and editions of Writing Otherwise: Experiments in Cultural by Jackie Stacey

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 26/08/2016
      ISBN13: 9781526106988, 978-1526106988
      ISBN10: 1526106981

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Writing otherwise is a collection of essays by established feminist and cultural critics interested in experimenting with new styles of expression. Leading figures in their field, such as Marianne Hirsch, Lynne Pearce, Griselda Pollock, Carol Smart, Jackie Stacey and Janet Wolff, all risk new ways of writing about themselves and their subjects.

      Aimed at both general and academic readers interested in how scholarly writing might be more innovative and creative, this collection introduces the personal, the poetic and the experimental into the frame of cultural criticism. This collection of essays is highly interdisciplinary and contributes to debates in sociology, history, anthropology, art history, cultural and media studies and gender studies.



      Trade Review

      This exciting and innovative collection presses up against the limits of what scholarship can be and its contributors are not afraid to pause where necessary to explore and describe those limits. The turn to the personal that has been so important for feminist and queer criticism is just one of the many richly varied voices and styles through which they insist on experimental writing not as a departure from scholarship but as itself a critical method. Moreover, their attention to writing offers unexpected vantage points on affect theory, including such elusive categories as sensation, mood, and atmosphere. Reading Writing otherwise feels at once enabling and deeply pleasurable.

      Ann Cvetkovich, Ellen Clayton Garwood Centennial Professor of English and Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Texas at Austin

      In this fascinating collection diverse scholars introduce readers to the imaginative resources liberated by writing somewhat aslant of conventional disciplinary guidelines. The essays highlight intense personal engagements, present intriguing visual imagery or in other ways depict the poetic and elusive resonance of emotions. It is reassuring and delightful to read these lucid essays, confirming once more the potential for working creatively in academia, especially when choosing to trouble its traditional styles and frameworks.
      Lynne Segal, author of Out of Time: The Pleasures & Perils of Ageing

      The essays in Writing otherwise provide indispensable models for academics attempting to combine theoretical savvy with readable, inventive prose.

      Susan Gubar, Distinguished Professor Emerita of English at Indiana University, writes the ‘Living with Cancer’ blog in The New York Times


      Writing otherwise grabbed me by the collar and pulled me into a world where I wouldn’t have minded staying. In this innovative collection, ‘writing otherwise’ is always sutured to ‘knowing otherwise’, whether historically (through use of memoir and fiction), textually (through playing with form and voice), or via the body (through touch and engagement with others). Drawing on the venerable feminist and queer traditions of interdisciplinarity and intersubjectivity, this collection shows us the difference that writing otherwise makes: it keeps the writer open to new ways of knowing; pulls her back to the past to see the future anew; forces a confrontation with dislocation and mortality; and yet marries loss and optimism in shifting cartographies of difference. Writing otherwise is an invitation to respond in kind in one’s own work, an invitation I now feel better equipped to accept.

      Clare Hemmings, Professor of Feminist Theory, at LSE's Gender Institute

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Writing otherwise - Jackie Stacey and Janet Wolff
      Affects
      Writing from the heart - Griselda Pollock
      Contact - Mary Cappello
      On being open to others: cosmopolitanism and the psychoanalysis of groups - Jackie Stacey
      Touching lives: writing the sociological and the personal - Carol Smart
      Displacements
      Atlantic moves - Janet Wolff
      Autopia: in search of what we're thinking when we're driving - Lynne Pearce
      Cheap chickens and ethical eggs: the place of an English village in the world - Vron Ware
      If the shoe fits: appropriating identity? - Brenda Cooper
      Dust and mangoes: plain tales and hill stations - Margaret Beetham
      Poetics
      Bliss (opera's untenable pleasures) - Monica B. Pearl
      Graphic to surface: textual effects and criticism - Judy Kendall
      First person, plural: notes on voice and collaboration - Marianne Hirsch and Leo Spitzer

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