Anagrams of Desire

Anagrams of Desire is an academic textbook about Angela Carter's media writings. Written by Charlotte Crofts and published by Manchester University Press in 2003, the full title is Anagrams of Desire: Angela Carter's Writing for Radio, Film and Television.

Anagrams of Desire: Angela Carter's Writing for Radio, Film and Television
Front Cover of Anagrams of Desire (MUP, 2003)
AuthorCharlotte Crofts
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SubjectAngela Carter's dramatic writings
GenreAcademic Text Book
PublisherManchester University Press (MUP) distributed by University of British Columbia Press (UBC Press)
Publication date
2003
Pages224pp
ISBN0-7190-5724-8
OCLC50783384
822/.914 21
LC ClassPR6053.A73 Z575 2003

The book examines Carter's five radio plays, her two film adaptations, The Company of Wolves (1984) and The Magic Toyshop (1987) and discusses the critically neglected television documentary The Holy Family Album (1991) and the BBC 2 Omnibus documentary about Carter: Angela Carter's Curious Room (1992). The book concludes with a brief discussion of Carter's unrealised dramatic writings, a libretto of Virginia Woolf's Orlando, a stage adaptation of Frank Wedekind's Lulu plays (Erdgeist et al.) and an unproduced screenplay entitled The Christchurch Murders, based on the Parker-Hulme New Zealand murders, the same incident which influenced Peter Jackson's film Heavenly Creatures.

According to Michael Pye of The Scotsman Crofts has "an excellent idea - a strong case for Carter’s less-discussed, less-remembered writing, especially her radio plays - and who writes good, sharp prose when she gets a chance, and who is full of proper doubts about the bigger, more flatulent generalisations that pass nowadays for "theory"."

According to Liz Milner "Croft's book is of limited appeal to a general reader and is best suited to academics interested in Media Studies and Feminism."

The title refers to a line from Carter's short story "The Merchant of Shadows", which concerns film-making and film-makers.

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