Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Welty, Eudora (Vol. 105) - Eric Homberger (review date 20 July 1984)


Welty, Eudora (Vol. 105) - Eric Homberger (review date 20 July 1984)

Eric Homberger (review date 20 July 1984)

SOURCE: A review of One Writer's Beginnings, in TLS, No. 4242, July 20, 1984, p. 806.

[In the following review, Homberger states that Welty's "One Writer's Beginnings is a reminder that the imagination can be as nourished by Jackson, Mississippi, as by Henry James's London, Kafka's Prague or Kundera's Brno."]

When in 1965, during the civil rights movement, Eudora Welty wrote that "Entering the hearts and minds of our own people is no harder now than it ever was", the most common response was a subdued sense of shock at a writer so little carried away by the dramatic struggles taking place around her.

The argument that Welty's work fails to register the great traumas of the age is a way of placing her "interest" as Southern, and therefore as regional. No myth-maker like Faulkner, her work stands or falls on the sense of place, the particular character of Mississippi. She...

[The entire page is 809 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: