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El. knyga: Cambridge Companion to Saul Bellow

Edited by (Trinity University, Texas)

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Saul Bellow is one of the most influential figures in twentieth-century American literature. Bellow's work explores the most important cultural and social experiences of his era: the impact of the Holocaust, the urban experience of European immigrants from a Jewish perspective, the fraught failures of the Vietnam War, the ideological seductions of Marxism and Modernism, and the changing attitudes concerning gender and race. This Companion demonstrates the complexity of this formative writer by emphasizing the ways in which Bellow's works speak to the changing conditions of American identity and culture from the post-war period to the turn of the twenty-first century. Individual chapters address the major themes of Bellow's work over more than a half-century of masterfully crafted fiction, articulating some of the most significant cultural experiences of the American twentieth century. It provides a comprehensive and accessible overview of a key figure in American literature.

Recenzijos

'A wonderful characteristic of this volume is that one can often 'hear' Bellow himself in dialogue with his critics and readers.' CHOICE

Daugiau informacijos

This book demonstrates the complexity of Bellow's work by emphasizing the ways in which it reflects the changing conditions of American identity.
List of Contributors
ix
Chronology xiii
Introduction: Saul Bellow in His Times 1(8)
Victoria Aarons
1 Bellow's Early Fiction and the Making of the Bellovian Protagonist
9(12)
Philippe Codde
2 Seize the Day: Bellow's Novel of Existential Crisis
21(11)
Hilene Flanzbaum
3 Bellow's Breakthrough: The Adventures of Augie March and the Novel of Voice
32(11)
Steven G. Kellman
4 Bellow's Cityscapes: Chicago and New York
43(12)
Gustavo Sanchez Canales
5 Bellow and the Holocaust
55(13)
Victoria Aarons
6 Humboldt's Gift and Bellow's Intellectual Protagonists
68(13)
S. Lillian Kremer
7 On Being a Jewish Writer: Bellow's Post-War America and the American Jewish Diaspora
81(15)
Alan L. Berger
8 Bellow and His Literary Contemporaries
96(12)
Timothy Parrish
9 Women and Gender in Bellow's Fiction: Herzog
108(12)
Paule Levy
10 Race and Cultural Politics in Bellow's Fiction
120(14)
Martin Urdiales-Shaw
11 Bellow on Israel: To Jerusalem and Back
134(12)
Leona Toker
12 Bellow's Non-Fiction: It All Adds Up
146(13)
Sukhbir Singh
13 Bellow's Short Fiction
159(12)
David Brauner
14 The Late Bellow: Ravelstein and the Novel of Ideas
171(12)
Leah Garrett
Guide to Further Reading 183(10)
Index 193
Victoria Aarons is the O. R. and Eva Mitchell Distinguished Professor of Literature at Trinity University, Texas. She is the author of A Measure of Memory (1996) and What Happened to Abraham (2005), both recipients of the Choice Award for Outstanding Academic Book; and the co-editor of The New Diaspora: The Changing Landscape of American Jewish Fiction (2014), and Bernard Malamud: A Centennial Tribute (2016). She is co-author of Third-Generation Holocaust Representation: Trauma, History, and Memory and editor of Third-Generation Holocaust Narratives: Memory in Memoir and Fiction, both published in 2016. Aarons has published over seventy scholarly articles and is on the editorial board of Philip Roth Studies, Studies in American Jewish Literature, Women in Judaism, and Verbeia, Journal of English and Spanish Studies. She serves as a judge for the Edward Lewis Wallant Award.