Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Stafford, Jean - Stacey D'Erasmo (essay date 1992)
Stafford, Jean - Stacey D'Erasmo (essay date 1992)
Stacey D'Erasmo (essay date 1992)
SOURCE: "The Lion in Winter: Jean Stafford's Heart of Darkness," in Village Voice Literary Supplement, June, 1992, pp. 31-2.
[In the following essay, D'Erasmo gives an overview of Stafford's career, providing insights into why she stopped writing .]
In one of Jean Stafford's most famous stories, "The Interior Castle," a young woman named Pansy Vannemann lies immobilized in a hospital bed after a disfiguring car accident. Retreating from her terrible pain, she imagines her own brain in voluptuous detail: "She envisaged [it], romantically, now as a jewel, now as a flower, now as a light in a glass, now as an envelope of rosy vellum containing other envelopes, one within the other, diminishing infinitely. It was always pink and always fragile, always deeply interior and invaluable." Stafford's model was St. Teresa of Avila's Interior Castle, an account of the soul's progress through pain to...
[The entire page is 3460 words long]
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Criticism
- Howard Mumford Jones (review date 1953)
- William Peden (review date 1953)
- Olga W. Vickery (essay date 1962)
- Eleanor Perry (review date 1964)
- Honor Tracy (review date 1964)
- Thomas Curley (review date 1965)
- Guy Davenport (review date 1969)
- Morris Dickstein (review date 1969)
- Irving Malin (review date 1969)
- Joyce Carol Oates (essay date 1979)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1982)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1983)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1985)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1986)
- Maureen Ryan (essay date 1987)
- Bruce Bawer (essay date 1988)
- Stacey D'Erasmo (essay date 1992)
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