Norman Mailer's NovelsRodopi, 1979 - 133 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 9
Página 7
... literary heroes that American writers created were " civilizers " of the rough and raw Land of Potential . And for the next few generations of writers the land was the Book of God . They , William Cullen Bryant , Ralph Waldo Emerson ...
... literary heroes that American writers created were " civilizers " of the rough and raw Land of Potential . And for the next few generations of writers the land was the Book of God . They , William Cullen Bryant , Ralph Waldo Emerson ...
Página 9
... literary career shortly before these post war ideas began to be fully expressed in fiction . In fact , it was his first published novel , The Naked and the Dead , that in some measure helped to bring these ideas to the forefront in ...
... literary career shortly before these post war ideas began to be fully expressed in fiction . In fact , it was his first published novel , The Naked and the Dead , that in some measure helped to bring these ideas to the forefront in ...
Página 11
... literary artist's efforts to espouse it . It is no wonder that all the protagonists of Mailer's last two novels ( Steven Rojack of An American Dream and D.J. Jethroe of Why Are We In Vietnam ? ) can manage is mere survival at worst ...
... literary artist's efforts to espouse it . It is no wonder that all the protagonists of Mailer's last two novels ( Steven Rojack of An American Dream and D.J. Jethroe of Why Are We In Vietnam ? ) can manage is mere survival at worst ...
Página 13
... literary artist he gained with The Naked and the Dead , Mailer has gone astray . For example , in his quest to prove his worth as a serious contender for Hemingway's Crown of Literary Celebrity , Mailer has published a collection of ...
... literary artist he gained with The Naked and the Dead , Mailer has gone astray . For example , in his quest to prove his worth as a serious contender for Hemingway's Crown of Literary Celebrity , Mailer has published a collection of ...
Página 58
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Contenido
7 | |
Barbary Shore | 45 |
The Deer Perk | 63 |
An American Dream | 87 |
History As Novel As History Armies of the Night | 101 |
Marilyn | 118 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
achieve Advertisements American Dream Amsterdam 1978 Army artist autonomy Barbary Shore become begins bureaucracy Cannibals and Christians Chapter Cherry courage Croft Cummings Dalleson Dead death Deborah Deer Park defeated describes Desert D'Or devil dread edition Eitel emotions Esquire existential existentialist Faye fiction Goldstein Guinevere Hearn hero hipster Hollingsworth homosexual idea illusion individual intellectual James L. W. West James Toback Kelly killed learns LEWIS TURCO literary little object lives Lulu Machine Mailer calls Mailer wrote manipulator Marilyn Marilyn Monroe McLeod metaphor Mikey Lovett morality movie Naked narcissism Norman Mailer one's personal power platoon political portrayed post World power structure Prisoner of Sex reality realizes reason Review Essay ROBERT Rojack Rusty SANDY COHEN says Mailer Sergius Shakespeare social society soldier Steven Rojack story subsequent citations symbolic T. S. Eliot tells Teppis totalitarianism Vietnam vision Volume wants World War II writers Wynkyn's York
Pasajes populares
Página 68 - So there was a new breed of adventurers, urban adventurers who drifted out at night looking for action with a black man's code to fit their facts. The hipster had absorbed the existentialist synapses of the Negro, and for practical purposes could be considered a white Negro.
Página 67 - In short, whether the life is criminal or not, the decision is to encourage the psychopath in oneself, to explore that domain of experience where security is boredom and therefore sickness, and one exists in the present, in that enormous present which is without past or future, memory or planned intention...
Página 67 - I'univers concentrationnaire, or with a slow death by conformity with every creative and rebellious instinct stifled . . . why then the only life-giving answer is to accept the terms of death, to live with death as immediate danger, to divorce oneself with society, to exist without roots, to set out on that uncharted journey into the rebellious imperatives of the self.
Página 68 - A member of a minority group is— if we are to speak existentially— not a man who is a member of a category, a Negro or a Jew, but rather a man who feels his existence in a particular way. It is in the very form or context of his existence to live with two opposed notions of himself. What characterizes a member of a minority group is that he is forced to see himself as both exceptional and insignificant, marvelous and awful, good and evil. So far as he listens to the world outside he is in danger...
Página 87 - Being out across the stars, or back into the protoplasm of life, then a portion of God's creative power was extinguished in the camps of extermination. If God is not all-powerful but existential, discovering the possibilities and limitations of His creative powers in the form of the history which is made by His creatures, then one must postulate an existential equal to God, an antagonist, the Devil, a principle of Evil whose signature was the concentration camps, whose joy is to waste substance,...
Página 66 - It is on this bleak scene that a phenomenon has appeared: the American existentialist — the hipster, the man who knows that if our collective condition is to live with instant death by atomic war, relatively quick death by the State as I'univers concentrationnaire, or with a slow death by conformity with every creative and rebellious instinct stifled...
Página 69 - Psychopath presented part of his definition in this way: . . . the psychopath is a rebel without a cause, an agitator without a slogan, a revolutionary without a program: in other words, his rebelliousness is aimed to achieve goals satisfactory to himself alone; he is incapable of exertions for the sake others.
Página 19 - So what you've got to do is break them down', Hearn said. 'Exactly. Break them down. Every time an enlisted man sees an officer get an extra privilege, it breaks him down a little more.
Página 20 - ... There are countries which have latent powers, latent resources, they are full of potential energy, so to speak. And there are great concepts which can unlock that, express it. As kinetic energy a country is organization, co-ordinated effort, in your epithet, fascism." He moved his chair slightly. "Historically, the purpose of this war is to translate America's potential into kinetic energy.
Referencias a este libro
The B Text of the Old English Bede: A Linguistic Commentary Raymond J. S. Grant Vista previa limitada - 1989 |