A New Fiedler ReaderPrometheus Books, 1999 - 588 sider Leslie Fiedler's radical opinions and theories have changed the way we think about American literature and pop culture, challenging long-established schools and ushering in a genre of first-person, experience-based criticism. Praised and respected as "one of the most important figures in the history of American cultural thought in this century," Fiedler introduced groundbreaking ideas that now permeate university studies in literature: a homoerotic element in American machismo, interracial dependence as the classical American bond, those on the social margins being "secret selves," and the continuum of "high" and "low" culture. Designed to delight Fiedler's contemporary audience and introduce the author to a whole new generation of readers, A New Fiedler Reader is a captivating anthology of Fiedler's most notorious and celebrated essays, along with a selection of his engaging poems and short fiction. A literary icon, Fiedler is among those who urged legalization of marijuana in the late '60s; suggested that college students read Timothy Leary along with Milton; and was accused of corrupting the young with dangerous leftist ideas. Collected are Fiedler's most widely known articles, from "Come Back to the Raft Ag'in, Huck Honey!" to "An Almost Imaginary Interview: Hemingway in Ketchum." Complementing these essays are various lesser known poems and short stories, providing the reader with the complete Fiedler experience. |
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Side 67
... tell my children something about the Ardeatine Caves , but I do not know the details they ask ( What does the overhanging slab weigh ? How old was the youngest victim ? ) ; and , anyhow , it is time to meet R. at the Portico of Octavia ...
... tell my children something about the Ardeatine Caves , but I do not know the details they ask ( What does the overhanging slab weigh ? How old was the youngest victim ? ) ; and , anyhow , it is time to meet R. at the Portico of Octavia ...
Side 163
... tell me , tell us ? " I could foresee the pain of reading the re- views of my first novel , just as I could feel Hemingway's pain read- ing the reviews of his later work . And I wanted to protest in the name of the pain itself that not ...
... tell me , tell us ? " I could foresee the pain of reading the re- views of my first novel , just as I could feel Hemingway's pain read- ing the reviews of his later work . And I wanted to protest in the name of the pain itself that not ...
Side 504
... tell a joke . Well , anyway , this man and his wife were in bed together , making love , when suddenly he says , ' Did I hurt you , darling ? ' ' No , ' she answers , ' why do you ask ? ' ' You moved ! ' he says . ” " Oh , Leonard ...
... tell a joke . Well , anyway , this man and his wife were in bed together , making love , when suddenly he says , ' Did I hurt you , darling ? ' ' No , ' she answers , ' why do you ask ? ' ' You moved ! ' he says . ” " Oh , Leonard ...
Innhold
Come Back to the Raft Agin Huck Honey | 3 |
Montana or The End of JeanJacques Rousseau | 13 |
Archetype and Signature | 24 |
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Die Ästhetik der Leerstelle: Raymond Federmans Roman "La fourrure de ma ... Danielle Reif Begrenset visning - 2005 |