Photographic Transgressions in Carol Shield’s “Scenes” Cover Image

Photographic Transgressions in Carol Shields’s “Scenes”
Photographic Transgressions in Carol Shield’s “Scenes”

Author(s): Zuzanna Szatanik
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: Photography; representation; biography; language

Summary/Abstract: The general aim of this article is to discuss ways in which an acclaimed Cana dian writer, Carol Shields, employs, and simultaneously subverts, photographic metaphors in her short story titled “Scenes.” Shields skillfully arranges a series of scenes from Frances’s — the protagonist’s — past into a concise biography. Owing to their affinity to photographs, the scenes from Frances’s life might be attributed the status of objective and honest representations of reality which function as truthful evidence of "what happened". Importantly, however, while Shields’s story evokes the photographic associations, it simultaneously calls in question their documentary reliability. In other words, Frances’s fragmentary biography — shown in (verbally constructed) images or flashes — undermines the concepts of both, a photograph as a documentary inscription of the truth, and language as a fitting medium of describing this truth.

  • Issue Year: 2008
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 110-119
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode