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Exposure

par Kathryn Harrison

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
2761195,950 (3.52)17
“Luminous and affecting . . . [Exposure] examines the often fine line between art and abuse. . . . Taut in plot, beautifully realistic, and intelligently disturbing.” –Harper’s Bazaar Ann Rogers appears to be a happily married, successful young woman. A talented photographer, she creates happy memories for others, videotaping weddings, splicing together scenes of smiling faces, editing out awkward moments. But she cannot edit her own memories so easily–images of a childhood spent as her father’s model and muse, the subject of his celebrated series of controversial photographs. To cope, Ann slips into a secret life of shame and vice. But when the Museum of Modern Art announces a retrospective of her father’s shocking portraits, Ann finds herself teetering on the edge of self-destruction, desperately trying to escape the psychological maelstrom that threatens to consume her. “Astounding . . . told in prose as multifaceted as a diamond, crystalline and mesmerizing. ‘Remarkable’ hardly goes far enough.” –Cosmopolitan “Impossible to put down . . . Kathryn Harrison is an extremely gifted writer, poetic, passionate, and elegant.” –San Francisco Chronicle “Exquisite, exhilarating, and harrowing.” –Donna Tartt, author of The Secret History and The Little Friend “A breathless urban nightmare not easy to forget. Stark, brilliant, and original work.” –Kirkus Reviews (starred review) … (plus d'informations)
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    Black & White par Dani Shapiro (sparemethecensor)
    sparemethecensor: New York City women dealing with their parent's child abuse, or at least exploitation, of them in famous photography.
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» Voir aussi les 17 mentions

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Ann Rogers appears to be a happily married, successful young woman. A talented photographer, she creates happy memories for others, videotaping weddings, splicing together scenes of smiling faces, editing out awkward moments. But she cannot edit her own memories so easily; images of a childhood spent as her father's model and muse, the subject of his celebrated series of controversial photographs. To cope, Ann slips into a secret life of shame and vice. But when the Museum of Modern Art announces a retrospective of her father's shocking portraits, Ann finds herself teetering on the edge of self-destruction, desperately trying to escape the psychological maelstrom that threatens to consume her.
  Cultural_Attache | Jul 29, 2018 |
I can't get enough of Kathryn Harrison. ( )
  Micalhut | Aug 20, 2013 |
I liked "The Seal Wife" by this author, but unfortunately I found this early novel, published in 1993, about a train-wreck of a diabetic woman who shoplifts and does drugs, to be disappointing. Ann Rogers, the main character, was relentlessly and obsessively photographed by her father in a variety of inappropriate situations. But rather than delving into the artistic and philosophic issues raised by their relationship, the novel devolves into a tabloid-style narrative that relies on faked official documentation and Ann's own italicized memories to break up an increasingly tedious portrait of a woman unable to help herself. ( )
  aseikonia | Sep 30, 2012 |
There was a kind of woman who was very fashionable throughout the nineties - intellectual, talented, beautiful, damaged in some vague and unspoken way. These women made a performance of their damage and of their self-destruction and took us all along for the ride. Kathryn Harrison, with her memoir of incest with her father The Kiss was certainly one of them. I think also of Elizabeth Wurtzel (Prozac Nation) and to a certain extent Kay Redfield Jamison (An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness), although I honestly think Jamison is ultimately more scholarly and less transgressive than the other two (and ultimately more successful). Ann Rogers, the main character in [book:Exposure: A Novel|208204] is definitely one of them.

Harrison's prose is razor-sharp and her characterizations are clear and unmuddied, but there's something dishonest at the heart of this novel and I can't quite put my finger on what it is. Perhaps it is the way that sickness and misery are romanticized through this character. Perhaps it is the cold and enabling nature of the people around her. Maybe it's the refusal to truly examine the relationship between father and daughter that is at the center of all of this misery.

Does Harrison capture what it feels like to begin spinning out of control in this way? Yes and no. Yes, in that Ann is certainly spinning out of control and no, in that her wealth privilege ultimately cushion her in a way that takes the reader and all of the characters in the novel out of the story. Depression and suicidal self-destruction are neither glamorous nor pretty - Harrison spends too much time on and just past the edge of pretty to make this book truly work. ( )
2 voter kraaivrouw | Jan 30, 2010 |
Het leven van een Amerikaanse videografe lijkt geen rimpeltje te bevatten: ze is mooi, gelukkig getrouwd en heeft succes. Tot de voorbereidingen voor een overzichtstentoonstelling van de foto's van haar vader, gewelddadige erotische ensceneringen waarvoor zij als kind poseerde, haar confronteren met haar traumatische jeugd. Ze probeert verwoed op de been te blijven, maar stort na de openingsavond in en moet worden opgenomen om in het reine te komen met een jeugd die werd geterroriseerd door haar vader.
Dit opmerkelijke boek is het zeer indringende verhaal van een sterke vrouw die moet toegeven dat ze het niet zonder hulp redt. Een uitstekend geschreven, goed vertaalde roman, waaraan je niet meer ontsnapt als je eraan bent begonnen. ( )
  jipanneke | Oct 4, 2009 |
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“Luminous and affecting . . . [Exposure] examines the often fine line between art and abuse. . . . Taut in plot, beautifully realistic, and intelligently disturbing.” –Harper’s Bazaar Ann Rogers appears to be a happily married, successful young woman. A talented photographer, she creates happy memories for others, videotaping weddings, splicing together scenes of smiling faces, editing out awkward moments. But she cannot edit her own memories so easily–images of a childhood spent as her father’s model and muse, the subject of his celebrated series of controversial photographs. To cope, Ann slips into a secret life of shame and vice. But when the Museum of Modern Art announces a retrospective of her father’s shocking portraits, Ann finds herself teetering on the edge of self-destruction, desperately trying to escape the psychological maelstrom that threatens to consume her. “Astounding . . . told in prose as multifaceted as a diamond, crystalline and mesmerizing. ‘Remarkable’ hardly goes far enough.” –Cosmopolitan “Impossible to put down . . . Kathryn Harrison is an extremely gifted writer, poetic, passionate, and elegant.” –San Francisco Chronicle “Exquisite, exhilarating, and harrowing.” –Donna Tartt, author of The Secret History and The Little Friend “A breathless urban nightmare not easy to forget. Stark, brilliant, and original work.” –Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

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