Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Writer and critic

      Chris Kraus (American writer) - Wikipedia
      • Chris Kraus (born 1955) is a writer and critic. Her work includes the novels I Love Dick, Aliens and Anorexia, and Torpor, which form a loose trilogy that navigates between autobiography, fiction, philosophy, and art criticism, and a sequence of novels dealing with American underclass experience that began with Summer of Hate.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Kraus_(American_writer)
  1. People also ask

  2. Chris Kraus (born 1955 [1]) is a writer and critic. Her work includes the novels I Love Dick, Aliens and Anorexia, and Torpor, which form a loose trilogy that navigates between autobiography, fiction, philosophy, and art criticism, [2] and a sequence of novels dealing with American underclass experience that began with Summer of Hate. [3]

  3. Apr 9, 2015 · “I Love Dick” is a “novel” about a woman named Chris Kraus and her unrequited, increasingly obsessive love for a cultural critic named Dick.

  4. Nov 13, 2016 · In the novel, Chris, a thirty-nine-year-old experimental filmmaker who has followed her husband, Sylvère, a professor, to Southern California on sabbatical, develops a crush on one of his...

    • Elaine Blair
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › I_Love_DickI Love Dick - Wikipedia

    I Love Dick is an epistolary novel with autofiction elements [1] by American artist and author Chris Kraus. [2] It was published in 1997 by Semiotext (e).

    • Chris Kraus
    • 1997
  6. Oct 16, 2017 · It is about a woman artist, called Chris Kraus, and her unrequited love for Dick, a cultural critic. Chris and Dick meet over dinner at Sushi restaurant in Pasadena, which they share with her fictional (but also real life) husband Sylvère Lotringer.

  7. Jul 25, 2024 · Kraus is best known for the novel “I Love Dick,” which first appeared in 1997 but caught a second wave of popularity in the Obama years, and then again in 2017, when it was adapted into an...

  8. Jun 22, 2017 · In the novel, a frustrated filmmaker named Chris Kraus meets and becomes obsessed with Dick, one of her husband’s colleagues. Her one-sided correspondence with him forms the basis for the book. It is a delicious bit of script-flipping: Dick never consents to be her muse, but she makes him one anyway.