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Advertisements for Myself [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 532 pages, aukštis x plotis: 210x140 mm, weight: 603 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Sep-1992
  • Leidėjas: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674005902
  • ISBN-13: 9780674005907
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 532 pages, aukštis x plotis: 210x140 mm, weight: 603 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Sep-1992
  • Leidėjas: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674005902
  • ISBN-13: 9780674005907
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Originally published in 1959, Advertisements for Myself is an inventive collection of stories, essays, polemic, meditations, and interviews. It is Mailer at his brilliant, provocative, outrageous best. Emerging at the height of "hip," Advertisements is at once a chronicle of a crucial era in the formation of modern American culture and an important contribution to the great autobiographical tradition in American letters.

Recenzijos

Anyone with a serious interest in American and in twentieth-century literature will applaud the reprinting of Norman Mailers Advertisements for Myself. No single work of his, before or since, is as important to an understanding of his literary career or of his emergence as an authentic public personality, and none is as fully representative of the range and variety of his concerns. -- Richard Poirier, Rutgers University This is a wonderful exercise in American autobiography, and in that self-mocking, self-glorifying, cynical, naive, outrageous, intelligent, uniquely his own and uniquely American autobiographical voice of which Mailer is the modern master. -- Wendy Lesser, editor of Threepenny Review Combining fictional fragments, autobiography, journalism, polemicwith a running commentary tracing the ups and downs of a novel-in-progress (Dos Passos for our times?) and asserting the authors place in the batting order of GREAT AMERICAN WRITERS, the book contains some of the best stuff Mailer ever produced. -- Karal Ann Marling, University of Minnesota At the very time that he is perhaps too insistently trying to recall the audience and himself to the importance of the task of the novelist, he is creating another public persona, part clown, part vulgarian, fool and genius, whose arena is not the imagined story, but the imagined life, led first in the pages of newspapers or on television screens, and then (giving us the story behind the spectacle) turned into essays (or are they stories?) whose main character is this endlessly revised Norman Mailera kind of expository confessional poetry. -- Jay Cantor, author of Krazy Kat

Daugiau informacijos

Combining fictional fragments, autobiography, journalism, polemic...with a running commentary tracing the ups and downs of a novel-in-progress (Dos Passos for our times?) and asserting the author's place in the batting order of GREAT AMERICAN WRITERS, the book contains some of the best stuff Mailer ever produced. -- Karal Ann Marling, University of Minnesota At the very time that he is perhaps too insistently trying to recall the audience and himself to the importance of the task of the novelist, he is creating another public persona, part clown, part vulgarian, fool and genius, whose arena is not the imagined story, but the imagined life, led first in the pages of newspapers or on television screens, and then (giving us the story behind the spectacle) turned into essays (or are they stories?) whose main character is this endlessly revised 'Norman Mailer'--a kind of expository confessional poetry. -- Jay Cantor, author of Krazy Kat
A Note to the Reader
First Table of Contents
Second Table of Contents
7(10)
First Advertisement for myself
17(10)
Part 1---BEGINNINGS
Advertisement for ``A Calculus At Heaven''
27(43)
A Calculus At Heaven
29(41)
Advertisement for ``The Greatest Thing in the World''
70(14)
The Greatest Thing in the World
70(14)
Advertisement for ``May be Next Year''
84(7)
Maybe Next Year
84(7)
Part 2---MIDDLES
Second Advertisement for myself
91(14)
Excerpts from Barbary Shore
94(11)
Third Advertisement for myself
105(3)
Advertisement for Three War Stories
108(42)
The Paper House
109(13)
The Language of Men
122(10)
The Dead Gook
132(18)
Advertisement for ``The Notebook''
150(3)
The Notebook
150(3)
Advertisement for ``The Man Who Studied Yoga''
153(33)
The Man Who Studied Yoga
157(29)
Advertisement for Three Political Pieces
186(28)
Our Country and Our Culture (Partisan Review Symposium)
187(3)
David Riesman Reconsidered
190(14)
The Meaning of Western Defense
204(10)
Postscript to ``The Meaning of Western Defense''
214(5)
Part 3---BIRTHS
Advertisement for Part Three
219(1)
Advertisement for ``The Homosexual Villain''
220(8)
The Homosexual Villain
222(6)
Fourth Advertisement for myself: The Last Draft of The Deer Park
228(37)
Three Excerpts from Rinehart and Putnam Versions of The Deer Park
250(12)
Two Reviews: Time and Newsweek
262(3)
Postscript to the Fourth Advertisement for myself
265(3)
Advertisement for Sixty-Nine Questions and Answers
268(9)
Sixty-Nine Questions and Answers
269(8)
Fifth Advertisement for myself: General Marijuana
277(18)
The Village Voice: First Three Columns
279(16)
Postscript to the first three columns
295(24)
The Village Voice: Columns Four to Seventeen
296(23)
Advertisement for the End of a Column and a Public Notice
319(8)
A Public Notice on Waiting for Godot
320(7)
Postscript to a Public Notice
327(4)
Part 4---HIPSTERS
Sixth Advertisement for myself
331(28)
The White Negro
337(22)
Note to ``Reflections on Hip''
359(17)
Reflections on Hip
359(13)
Hipster and Beatnik
372(4)
Advertisement for ``Hip, Hell and the Navigator''
376(12)
Hip, Hell and the Navigator
376(12)
Part 5---GAMES AND ENDS
Advertisement for ``Games and Ends''
388(3)
Advertisement for ``It''
391(1)
It
391(1)
Advertisement for ``Great in the Hay''
392(2)
Great in the Hay
392(2)
Advertisement for ``The Patron Saint of Macdougal Alley''
394(9)
The Patron Saint of Macdougal Alley
394(9)
Advertisement for a letter to the New York Post
403(8)
A Letter to the New York Post
403(1)
How to Commit Murder in the Mass-Media-A
404(2)
How to Commit Murder in the Mass Media-B
406(5)
Advertisement for Buddies
411(11)
Buddies, or the Hole in the Summit
412(10)
Postscript to Buddies
422(1)
Advertisement for ``Notes Toward a Psychology of the Orgy''
423(19)
The Hip and the Square
424(7)
The List
424(2)
Catholic and Protestant
426(2)
T-Formation and Single Wing
428(3)
A Note on Comparative Pornography
431(3)
From Surplus Value to the Mass-Media
434(4)
Sources-A Riddle in Psychical Economy
438(2)
Lament of a Lady
440(1)
I Got Two Kids and Another in the Oven
441(1)
Advertisement for The Deer Park as a play
442(32)
The Deer Park (Scenes 2, 3, and 4)
443(18)
An Eye on Picasso
461(2)
Evaluations: Quick and Expensive Comments on the Talent in the Room
463(11)
Last Advertisement for myself Before the Way Out
474(4)
A Note for ``The Time of Her Time''
478(26)
The Time of Her Time
478(26)
Advertisement for ``Dead Ends''
504(1)
Dead Ends (a long poem)
505(7)
Advertisements for Myself on the Way Out
512
Norman Mailer was an American novelist and essayist.