Media Database
>
Carly Taylor

Carly Taylor

Author at stanforddaily.com at The Stanford Daily, Stanford University

Contact this person
Email address
c*****@*******.comGet email address
Influence score
30
Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics

    View more media outlets and journalists by signing up to Prowly

    View latest data and reach out all from one place
    Sign up for free

    Recent Articles

    stanforddaily.com

    Q&A: Stanford history lecturer Peter Mann is an undercover novelist

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    Poet Aracelis Girmay on grief, Black motherhood and marrow language

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    Sara Davis’ ‘The Scapegoat’: A Lynchian mystery set at Stanford

    If you, like me, haven’t seen Stanford’s campus in a year thanks to our lovely friend the pandemic, you’ll be filled with nostalgia at the sound of these familiar place names, writes Carly Taylor.
    stanforddaily.com

    Smell, involuntary memory and COVID-19

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    The poetics of quarantined space: Revisiting Bachelard

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    Ottessa Moshfegh’s unstoppable imagination in ‘Death in Her Hands’

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    Creative reencounters with research in Art of Science 2020 Exhibition

    Art of Science 2020, organized by Stanford Materials Research Society, creates a space for Stanford scientists from all disciplines to encounter their own research in a different way by translating their work into a piece of art.
    stanforddaily.com

    Craft and patience in ‘A Prayer for Travelers’

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    Living artistically with ‘Tropic of Cancer’

    Carly Taylor describes how Henry Miller's unchaste classic can reinvigorate our lives.
    stanforddaily.com

    On Alexandra Kleeman’s ‘You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine’

    I purchased Alexandra Kleeman’s novel, “You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine,” on a whim because a review on the back cover said, “Kleeman has written ‘Fight
    stanforddaily.com

    What movies can do that books cannot

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    The bearable heaviness of being: reflections on ‘Mrs. Dalloway’

    Carly Taylor ’22 is a Managing Editor of Arts & Life. She studies comparative literature and creative writing. On campus, you can find her organizing concerts and practicing martial arts. Contact her at ctaylor ‘at’ stanforddaily.com.
    stanforddaily.com

    New modes of being: Reflections on Magritte and Sappho

    Works of art can bring us closer to other people, raise questions that make us examine our values and opinions and articulate emotions and thoughts we’ve had