Eudora Welty and Surrealism
267 pages, 6 x 9
15 b&w illustrations
Paperback
Release Date:29 May 2014
ISBN:9781628460551
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Hardcover
Release Date:03 Dec 2012
ISBN:9781617036736
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Eudora Welty and Surrealism

University Press of Mississippi

Winner of the 2013 Eudora Welty Prize

Eudora Welty and Surrealism surveys Welty’s fiction during the most productive period of her long writing life. The study shows how the 1930s witnessed surrealism’s arrival in the United States largely through the products of its visual artists. Welty, a frequent traveler to New York City, where the surrealists exhibited, and a keen reader of magazines and newspapers that disseminated their work, absorbed and unconsciously appropriated surrealism’s perspective in her writing. In fact, Welty’s first solo exhibition of her photographs in 1936 took place next door to New York’s premier venue for surrealist art.

In a series of readings that collectively examine A Curtain of Green and Other Stories, The Wide Net and Other Stories, Delta Wedding, The Golden Apples, and The Bride of the Innisfallen and Other Stories, the book reveals how surrealism profoundly shaped Welty’s striking figurative literature. Yet the influence of the surrealist movement extends beyond questions of style. The study’s interpretations also foreground how her writing refracted surrealism as a historical phenomenon.

Scattered throughout her stories are allusions to personalities allied with the movement in the United States, including figures such as Salvador Dalí, Elsa Schiaparelli, Caresse Crosby, Wallace Simpson, Cecil Beaton, Helena Rubinstein, Elizabeth Arden, Joseph Cornell, and Charles Henri Ford. Individuals such as these and others whom surrealism seduced often lead unorthodox and controversial lives that made them natural targets for moral opprobrium. Eschewing such parochialism, Welty borrowed the idiom of surrealism to develop modernized depictions of the South, a literary strategy that revealed not only cultural farsightedness but great artistic daring.

Long have we marveled at the complexity of Welty’s visual images, and now Stephen M. Fuller offers us the surrealist lens to understand Welty’s style on a wholly new, rewarding, and intellectually satisfying plane. Eudora Welty and Surrealism changes the course of Welty studies in the twenty-first century. Pearl Amelia McHaney, editor of Eudora Welty as Photographer and the Eudora Welty Review

Stephen M. Fuller is assistant professor of English at Middle Georgia College in Cochran. His work has been published in Southern Quarterly, Studies in Short Fiction, and Journal of Popular Culture.

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