Aperture

Carmen Winant

oward the beginning of Virginia Woolf’s 1928 novel , the title character falls madly in love with Sasha, an androgynous Russian princess. As he (for he is “he” in the early part of the book before transforming into “she”) firsts beholds Sasha, unsure whether she is a boy or a woman,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Aperture

Aperture1 min read
Aperture
Editor in Chief Michael Famighetti Senior Editor Brendan Embser Associate Managing Editor Varun Nayar Contributing Editors, The PhotoBook Review Noa Lin, Lesley A. Martin Copy Editors Hilary Becker, Donna Ghelerter, Chris Peterson Production Director
Aperture3 min read
Searching for Cayenne
Like the writers Frantz Fanon, Aimé Césaire, and Édouard Glissant before her, Cédrine Scheidig is, to borrow the words of Glissant’s American translator, a distinguished theorist of “Caribbean self-formation.” Born in 1994 in the Seine-Saint-Denis su
Aperture4 min read
The “Good” Change
A gray-haired woman looks upward intently, her gaze fixed, head tilted back, and face mask lowered to amplify her shout—a picture of defiance. Taken by the Polish artist and photojournalist Agata Szymanska-Medina, it’s among the striking portraits in

Related Books & Audiobooks