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Joyce Carol Oates’ Twitter Account: The Last Pure Haven in the Chaos of Social Media | Culture

Posted on March 10, 2025 by Igor Mitreski

a
The skeleton is at the center of the T. So, that’s because of Joyce Carroll Oates’s online infamy. In 2021, the award-winning novelist provided her most important contribution to literature: Diabolical
Tweet anti-minating about existentialism in Halloween.

(You can always recognize places where no one feels or feels sad for the lost loved one and death, the one who dies, and the person who likes to break down into bones is just a joke.) https://t.co/1OuMqgw550

– Joyce Carol Oates (@joycecaroloates) October 1, 2021


For beginners, the 86-year-old five-time Pulitzer finalist used the platform on X (formerly Twitter) to share photos of impressive American-style Halloween ornaments featuring dozens of plastic skeletons climbing the front of the house. “You can always recognize a place where no one has experienced much grief for a lost loved one,” she wrote. “Everyone who likes to break it down into bones is kidding.”


This unique take on Halloween tradition was filled with some kind of confused online glee. In an increasingly polarized political world, we rarely encounter such injustice and strong opinions. There is no culture war, nor popular discourse,
Just a thought From Zeus’ forehead it turned like Athena. Or a creepy ghost who pops out at you in a haunted house – you shouldn’t be kidding about it.

emojis are poetry for the non-literate. 🔜🔚 https://t.co/Jp8zq3Ty9C

– Joyce Carol Oates (@JoyceCarolOates) October 15, 2024


However, this is not just a one-off phenomenon. In fact, this is one example of a bewildering array of classic Joyce Carroll Oats tweets. This makes another addition to her trophy shelf an attractive case. Winner of the Poet Award on Social Media. I’m not mean here. I really love her tweets and they are one of the only things that bring joy to me on the Nazi awarded platforms rapidly. As Twitter user Kaitlin Ruiz puts, “She doesn’t need to answer specialization. Oracles don’t see consistency.”

It is important to understand that Joyce Carroll Oates has definitive opinions on trance rights (good!) and dinosaur poaching (bad!), skeletons (worrisome!). She doesn’t need to answer any specialties. Oracles are not consistent.

– Kaitlin Ruiz (@kaitlin_m_ruiz) February 21, 2023


Oates is a prolific writer in all aspects of her life. She published 58 novels, and more importantly, she wrote 170k tweets. Her targets are wide and abundant. There’s a political view: dozens of tweets a day
Harris v Trump and
Israel’s war with Gaza. She was one day outright about trans rights and wrote about it
JD Vance’s other small eyes – But she is also not afraid to challenge a whimsical world.
Her cat is pondering the problem with the trolley.

The point is that she posts frequently without agenda to sell anything and has seemingly embarrassing honesty. In an interview, she rejected the medium
“It was short-lived and quickly forgotten.”. However, she feels her relationship with the platform is pure. How to use Twitter.

The unexamined premise of the “trolley problem” is that individuals, as we know, do not have any kind of subjective tendencies, including the Catnip’s drunkenness, the philosophers who have lived in the past, not subjective preferences/unconscious motives/free philosophers. You kill the poor… https://t.co/gze1kcjzyw

– Joyce Carol Oats (@joycecaroloates) May 27, 2024


All thoughts come directly from her huge creative brain, from the online farm to the table. “What we’ve heard about ISIS is pure and punitive. Is there anything fun to celebrate?”
She asked in 2015. “Are there any examples of women getting obsessed with historical events?”
She meditated in 2023. Then there was a time when she posted a really conflicting photo of her
Infected feet online.

www.theguardian.com
This entry was posted in Technology and tagged account, carol, chaos, culture, haven, Joyce, media, Oates, Pure, social, twitter by Igor Mitreski. Bookmark the permalink.

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