Description
These five stories present and trouble a question that has been posed in literature from courtly love poetry to Romantic anti-heroes to the writing born of Twentieth Century human and civil rights movements: what if one's individual desires are greater

These five stories present and trouble a question that has been posed in literature from courtly love poetry to Romantic anti-heroes to the writing born of Twentieth Century human and civil rights movements: what if one's individual desires are greater than or different from what she is allowed by her world, or half her conscience? Where should her fidelity lie? Unrepentant transgression and the penance one must endure after such a choice: in one way or another that recognition and impulse, and the aftermath of following it, is the force that moves characters through these stories. The stories are of romantic love, and the love is both literal unto itself and an allegory: the question of fidelity has to do with the self, as the characters' choice to attain the lover, in each case, is also an attainment of the self because it is an assertion of the "rightness" of individual desire against the decrees of a greater system. The "crossing" thus refers to that of boundaries: the characters make choices to push or break through what is sanctioned and what is untried; they transform; they become from one self into another as they resolve to defy, love, and simply be, drawing new lines through and around their worlds.
Reuse Permissions
  • Downloads
    pdf (428.9 KB)

    Details

    Title
    • Crossing: stories
    Contributors
    Date Created
    2012
    Subjects
    Resource Type
  • Text
  • Collections this item is in
    Note
    • Partial requirement for: M.F.A., Arizona State University, 2012
      Note type
      thesis
    • Field of study: Creative writing

    Citation and reuse

    Statement of Responsibility

    by Branden Boyer-White

    Machine-readable links