New Nation Column: Lifestyles of the Rich and Generous?
Read Pollitt's latest column, "Lifestyles of the Rich and Generous?"
Read Pollitt's latest column, "Lifestyles of the Rich and Generous?"
Katha Pollitt reviewed Elaine Showalter's A Jury of Her Peers, a history about American women writers and their relationship to the literary marketplace, for Slate. Read the full review here.
Check out Pollitt's piece in Opera News about Dvořák’s Rusalka, which opens at the Metropolitan Opera House this month. In "Water Music," opera aficionado Pollitt explores the history of Slavic opera and offers a feminist critique of doomed love:
There's something deep in these tragic tales of otherworldly women and mortal men, and in the network of associations in which they are enmeshed — water, beauty, silence, love, rejection, danger, vengeance, death. Set aside for a moment the overlay of nineteenth-century Romanticism that makes the heroine a sad-eyed ethereal teenager, and perhaps one can glimpse the origin of the story in a primeval awe of water, that powerful, mysterious, alluring element, giver of both life and death. But water is a metaphor as well. Writing in OPERA NEWS in 1993, John Simon suggested that the legend of Mélusine, that medieval prototype of the Rusalka story, is "a parable of the ultimate incompatibility of man and woman, of the impossibility of love." Woman as water, as Other; man as, well, human — distractible, fickle, shallow, forgetful.
Buy Katha Pollitt’s acclaimed collection of poetry,
THE MIND-BODY PROBLEM
“It’s awfully good to have such a great-hearted poet as Katha Pollitt take on mortality’s darkest themes. Again and again she finds a human-sized crack of light and squeezes us through with her.”—Kay Ryan, United States Poet Laureate
Katha Pollitt writes the award-winning column, “Subject to Debate,” for The Nation magazine. She is also the author of two books of poetry and several collections of essays. Pollitt currently lives in Berlin, where she is working on a new book.