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One of America's foremost literary critics presents twenty-eight
essays on American and European writers, including Joyce, Flaubert,
Fitzgerald, Melville, Dostoevsky, and Faulkner.
Introduction by Alfred Kazin
Uncle Tom, Topsy, Sambo, Simon Legree, little Eva: their names are American bywords, and all of them are characters in Harriet Beecher Stowe's remarkable novel of the pre-Civil War South. Uncle Tom's Cabin was revolutionary in 1852 for its passionate indictment of slavery and for its presentation of Tom, "a man of humanity," as the first black hero in American fiction. Labeled racist and condescending by some contemporary critics, it remains a shocking, controversial, and powerful work -- exposing the attitudes of white nineteenth-century society toward "the peculiar institution" and documenting, in heartrending detail, the tragic breakup of black Kentucky families "sold down the river." An immediate international sensation, Uncle Tom's Cabin sold 300,000 copies in the first year, was translated into thirty-seven languages, and has never gone out of print: its political impact was immense, its emotional influence immeasurable.
When Henry Roth published his debut novel Call It Sleep in 1934, it
was greeted with considerable critical acclaim though, in those
troubled times, lackluster sales. Only with its paperback
publication thirty years later did this novel receive the
recognition it deserves----and still enjoys. Having sold-to-date
millions of copies worldwide, " Call It Sleep" is the magnificent
story of David Schearl, the "dangerously imaginative" child coming
of age in the slums of New York.
Kazin's memorable description of his life as a young man as he
makes the journey from Brooklyn to "americanca"-the larger world
that begins at the other end of the subway in Manhattan. A classic
portrayal of the Jewish immigrant culture of the 1930s. Drawings by
Marvin Bileck.
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Howards End (Hardcover)
E.M. Forster; Introduction by Alfred Kazin
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R659
R557
Discovery Miles 5 570
Save R102 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Introduction by Alfred Kazan
A landmark in American literature, presented in its complete and unexpurgated version. Dreiser's unsparing story of a country girl's rise to riches as the mistress of a wealthy man marked the beginning of the naturalist movement in America. Both its subject matter and Dreiser's objective, nonmoralizing approach made it highly controversial, and only a heavily edited version could be published in 1900. In this restored version, the truly revolutionary nature of Sister Carrie is made fully evident.
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Call it Sleep (Paperback)
Henry Roth; Introduction by Alfred Kazin
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R364
R298
Discovery Miles 2 980
Save R66 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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David Schearl arrives in New York in his mother's arms to begin his
new life as an immigrant in the 'Golden Land'. David is hated by
his father - an angry, violent man unable to find his niche in the
New World - but is fiercely loved and protected by his
Yiddish-speaking mother. An innovative, multi-lingual novel, Call
It Sleep subtly interweaves the overwhelming love between a mother
and son with the terrors and anxieties David experiences, as he
seeks to find his own identity amidst the cultural disarray of
early twentieth-century America.
Over the course of sixty years, Alfred Kazin's writings
confronted virtually all of our major imaginative writers, from
Emerson to Emily Dickinson to James Wright and Joyce Carol Oates --
including such unexpected figures as Lincoln, William James, and
Thorstein Veblen. This son of Russian Jews wrote out of the
tensions of the outsider and the astute, outspoken leftist -- or,
as he put it, "the bitter patriotism of loving what one knows."
Editor Ted Solotaroff hasselected material from Kazin's three
classic memoirs to accompany his critical writings. Alfred Kazin's
America provides an ongoing example of the spiritual freedom,
individualism, and democratic contentiousness that he regarded as
his heritage and endeavored to pass on.
God and the American Writer does more to illuminate the fundamental purposes and motivations of our greatest writers from Hawthorne to Faulkner than any study I have read in the past fifty-five years--that is, since the same author's On Native Grounds. --Louis S. Auchincloss
This is the culminating work of the finest living critic of American literature. Alfred Kazin brings a lifetime of thought and reading to the triumphant elucidation of his fascinating and slippery subjects: what the meaning of God has been for American writers, and how those writers, from the New England Calvinists to William Faulkner, have expressed it. In a series of trenchant critical studies of writers as divergent as Hawthorne, Melville, Emerson, Lincoln, Whitman, Dickinson, Twain, William James, Eliot, Frost, and Faulkner, Kazin gives a profound sense of each, and his quotations from their works are artfully chosen to pursue the main theme. The centerpiece of the book is the reflection in American writing of the great American tragedy, the Civil War--so deeply involved in the whole complex issue of religion in America. An enthralling book by a major writer.
"This is a book about the place of God in the imaginative life of a country that for two centuries countenanced slavery and then engaged in a fratricidal war to end it. For Americans no subject is more compelling or, in its entanglement with the deepest roots of the national soul, more terrible. And no one has ever written as incisively, as movingly, or as unforgivingly about it as Alfred Kazin has here." --Louis Menand
"In the era of willful obfuscation, Alfred Kazin is the good, clear word, a brilliant scholar and an original reader. His latest book, God and the American Writer, which comes fifty-five years after On Native Grounds, proves he has lost nothing and gives us everything he has." --David Remnick
"American writers have been born into all sorts of religious sects, but have had to struggle in solitude to make sense of God. Alfred Kazin, a cosmos unto himself, has written brilliantly and affectingly of how a dozen or so of our finest authors--poets, novelists, philosophers, and one president--endured and illuminated that struggle. Kazin is sometimes passionate, even fierce, especially in his discussions of slavery and of his hero (and mine), Abraham Lincoln. But, as ever, Kazin's writing is tempered by an enormous American empathy and by his sense of irony about our country and its spiritual predicaments. Spare, sharp, and immensely learned, God and the American Writer is the most moving volume of criticism yet by our greatest living critic." --Sean Wilentz
From the Hardcover edition.
From the journals of one of our most distinguished critics comes an extraordinary panorama of the intellectual, social and political culture of the last half century. Written with the vividness and power of first-rate fiction, it brings to life the great artists and thinkers who shaped the times, including Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud and Hannah Arendt, and shares Kazin's insights on politics, literature, Jewish life after the Holocaust and American society. It is an immensely rich and resonant memoir from an observer whose eloquence can imbue each moment lived with a lifetime of thought and passion.
A classic interpretation of literature from America's golden
age-including the work of Howells, Wharton, Lewis, Cather,
Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Faulkner. New Preface by the Author;
Index.
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Writing in America (Hardcover)
John Fischer, Robert B. Silvers; Contributions by John Fischer, Robert B. Silvers, Mason W. Gross, …
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R1,097
Discovery Miles 10 970
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In the fall of 1959, Harper's Magazine published a special
supplement on the state of writing and the American literary scene.
The supplement was greeted with a broadside of commendation and a
fusillade of cavil, and has since become recognized as the most
useful brief survey of the contemporary state of the American
writing arts and of their fellow travelers, the spoken word, the
typescript word, the filmed and televised word, and the publishing
memorandum. In this newly reissued volume in the Rutgers University
Press Classics Imprint, Writing in America proves to be as
stimulating as it was in 1960. Here, writers including Robert
Brustein, Stanley Kunitz, and C.P. Snow examine the state of
writing in American novels, films, and television candidly and
critically. The result is a collection of essays that showcase a
first-rate and highly entertaining piece of reporting on the
American literary scene that resonate in 2017.
In this book, Alfred Kazin, who for more than 30 years has been one
of the central figures of America's intellectual life, takes us
into his own life and times. His autobiography encompasses a
personal story openly told; an inside look at New York's innermost
intellectual circles; strong and intimate revelations of many of
the most important writers of the century; and brilliantly astute
observations of the literary accomplishments, atmosphere, and fads
of the 1940s, 50s, and 60s in the context of America's shifting
political gales.
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Writing in America (Paperback)
John Fischer, Robert B. Silvers; Contributions by John Fischer, Robert B. Silvers, Mason W. Gross, …
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R474
Discovery Miles 4 740
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In the fall of 1959, Harper's Magazine published a special
supplement on the state of writing and the American literary scene.
The supplement was greeted with a broadside of commendation and a
fusillade of cavil, and has since become recognized as the most
useful brief survey of the contemporary state of the American
writing arts and of their fellow travelers, the spoken word, the
typescript word, the filmed and televised word, and the publishing
memorandum. In this newly reissued volume in the Rutgers University
Press Classics Imprint, Writing in America proves to be as
stimulating as it was in 1960. Here, writers including Robert
Brustein, Stanley Kunitz, and C.P. Snow examine the state of
writing in American novels, films, and television candidly and
critically. The result is a collection of essays that showcase a
first-rate and highly entertaining piece of reporting on the
American literary scene that resonate in 2017.
The story of a house and two sisters, Howards End is also a subtle
meditation on national, sexual and social identities. Half German
by birth and middle-class English by upbringing, Helen and Margaret
Schlegel struggle to come to terms with the problems of their
inheritance in Edwardian England. If the contrasting temperaments
of the heroines often recall Sense and Sensibility, the comparison
with Jane Austen is fully justified by the power of Forster's irony
and the brilliance of his wit.
The Portable Blake contains the hermetic genius's most important works: Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience in their entirety; selections from his "prophetic books"—including The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, Visions of the Daughters of Abion, America, The Book of Urizen, and The Four Zoas—and from other works of poetry and prose, as well as the complete drawings for The Book of Job.
In this illuminating study of the "crucial century" (1830-1930),
Alfred Kazin views the major figures in American writing, beginning
when Ralph Waldo Emerson left the church and inspired a national
literature on the basis of a religious revolution, and ending with
the triumph of modernism - Eliot, Pound, Hemingway, Fitzgerald -
and with the revelation after World War I of the "postponed power"
of those who had been modern before their time: Henry Adams,
Melville, Whitman, Dickinson.
For more than sixty years Alfred Kazin has been one of the most
eloquent witnesses to the literary life of the mind in America.
Writing Was Everything is a summation of that life, a story of
coming of age as a writer and critic that is also a vibrant
cultural drama teeming with such characters as Hart Crane and Allen
Ginsberg, Simone Weil and Flannery O'Connor, Hannah Arendt and
Robert Lowell, Edmund Wilson and George Orwell. A deft blend of
autobiography, history, and criticism that moves from New York in
the 1930s to wartime England to the postwar South, Writing Was
Everything emerges as a reaffirmation of literature in an age of
deconstruction and critical dogma. In his encounters with books,
Kazin shows us how great writing matters and how it involves us
morally, socially, and personally on the deepest level. Whether
reflecting on modernism, southern fiction, or black, Jewish, and
New Yorker writing or reliving the work of Richard Wright, Saul
Bellow, and John Cheever, he gives a penetrating, moving account of
literature observed and lived. In his life as a critic, Kazin
personifies the lesson that living and writing are necessarily
intimate. Writing Was Everything encapsulates the lively wit and
authority of this timeless critic's unmistakable voice. It stands
as clear testimony to Kazin's belief that "literature is not theory
but, at best, the value we can give to our experience, which in our
century has been and remains beyond the imagination of mankind."
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