Ralf Webb

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Photograph: Devin Blair

Books

Books

Ralf Webb (b. 1991) is a poet, writer and editor based in London. His debut collection of poems, Rotten Days in Late Summer was published by Penguin in 2021, and was shortlisted for the Felix Dennis Prize for Best First Collection. Webb’s poetry and critical writing has appeared in the likes of the London Review of Books, Fantastic Man, The Poetry Review, and the Guardian. Across 2020 - 21 he ran PoetryxClass, an Arts Council-funded reading group and seminar series. He has written on film for the Berwick Film & Media Arts Festival, Sheffield DocFest, and The White Review, where he worked as Managing Editor for four years. He currently manages a creative writing mentorship programme in collaboration with Folio and First Story, which supports school-age writers from low-income backgrounds. In 2022 he will be a writer in residence at the Jan Michalski Foundation in Switzerland. 

His first non-fiction book, STRANGE RELATIONS: MASCULINITY, SEXUALITY AND ART IN MID-CENTURY AMERICA, will be published by Sceptre in July 2024. 

Praise for STRANGE RELATIONS (2024):

'Textured literary portraits of the masculine mind and body. Webb has skilfully blended narratives of maleness, queer desire and gender norms with mid-century American cultural critiques. If you're a fan of Judith Butler, Hilton Als, Mark Doty, you will love Webb's Strange Relations.' Raymond Antrobus, author of All The Names Given

'A compassionate, imaginative, inquisitive book about men, how American authors like Carson McCullers, Tennessee Williams, and James Baldwin wrote about masculinity, and how they imagined relationships between men-and women. Webb's writing is of a quality rarely seen, and his book returns you to the world slightly changed, equipped with another angle of vision on the quiddity of man.' Diarmuid Hester, author of Nothing Ever Just Disappears

Non-Fiction

Publication DetailsNotes
2024

Sceptre

In October 1960, James Baldwin and John Cheever spoke on a panel together at San Francisco State College. The troubled state of American society was under discussion, which Baldwin incisively diagnosed as a 'failure of the masculine sensibility'.

Strange Relations explores this crisis in mid-century masculinity and the lives and works of four bisexual writers who fought to express and embody alternate possibilities. Building on Walt Whitman's philosophy of the love between men, Ralf Webb considers the ways in which Tennessee Williams and Carson McCullers, as well as Cheever and Baldwin, resisted in their art, as well as in their relationships, the damaging expectations of contemporary gender and sexuality.

With a curious, intelligent and sensitive gaze, Ralf Webb sheds new light on each writer. Together, these artists offer a powerful and moving argument for a transformative new masculinity, grounded in fluidity, love and intimacy.