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Souvenir Souvenir
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Cite
Extract
Novelist and short story writer Jayne Anne Phillips was born in Buckhannon, West Virginia. She began writing at the age of nine, inventing wild adventure stories about herself and her friends, before turning to poetry in her teens at the encouragement of her teachers. She earned a BA in 1974 from West Virginia University and an MA in 1978 from the University of Iowa, where she studied at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, publishing two collections of short stories while still a graduate student. With the publication of her critically acclaimed short story collection Black Tickets (1979), Phillips established herself as an important voice on the American literary scene.
Although Phillips has lived most of her life outside Appalachia, teaching creative writing at universities, including Harvard and Brandeis, and founding an MFA program at Rutgers University–Newark, the Appalachian region informs the subject matter of much of her fiction. Phillips is sometimes considered a member of the school of dirty realism, a subset of minimalism, along with non-Appalachian writers such as Raymond Carver and Tobias Wolff. Disintegration of the family unit, personal isolation, the abandonment of traditional gender roles, raw sensuality, and changes in American society in the wake of the Vietnam War are among Phillips’s concerns. Her working-class characters seek escape and transcendence while grappling with everyday tragedy in a world coming unhinged.
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