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Speaking in 1957, Evelyn Waugh commented that Hemingway was "really
at heart a Catholic author."
In this groundbreaking study, Matthew Nickel explores Hemingway's
Catholic faith through close scrutiny of his fiction and other
writings. Using previously unpublished Hemingway letters, Nickel
reveals how Hemingway's profound sacramental sense of ritual,
pilgrimage and sacrifice informed his work ... and his life.
""Matthew Nickel is a thorough and careful scholar. He has delved
beneath the surface and has found a treasure trove of meaning. This
book will enrich every reader's understanding of Hemingway, the man
and his work."" - Valerie Hemingway, author of "Running with the
Bulls: My Years with the Hemingways"
""Nickel's scholarship is impeccable, thoroughgoing and
perspicacious. ... A cutting-edge study of the most urgent concerns
of one of our greatest writers."" - H.R. Stoneback, Distinguished
Professor English, SUNY New Paltz
""Nickel has written a very strong Catholic reading of all of
Hemingway, grounded in lucid textuality and exhaustive research.""
- Allen Josephs, past president of the Hemingway Foundation and
Society, author of "Ritual and Sacrifice in the Corrida"
In Civil War Humor, author Cameron C. Nickels examines the various
forms of comedic popular artifacts produced in America from 1861 to
1865, and looks at how wartime humor was created, disseminated, and
received by both sides of the conflict. Song lyrics, newspaper
columns, sheet music covers, illustrations, political cartoons,
fiction, light verse, paper dolls, printed envelopes, and penny
dreadfuls-from and for the Union and the Confederacy-are analyzed
at length. Nickels argues that the war coincided with the rise of
inexpensive mass printing in the United States and thus
subsequently with the rise of the country's widely distributed
popular culture. As such, the war was as much a "paper
war"-involving the use of publications to disseminate propaganda
and ideas about the Union and the Confederacy's positions-as one
taking place on battlefields. Humor was a key element on both sides
in deflating pretensions and establishing political stances (and
ways of critiquing them). Civil War Humor explores how the
combatants portrayed Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln, life on
the home front, battles, and African Americans. Civil War Humor
reproduces over sixty illustrations and texts created during the
war and provides close readings of these materials. At the same
time, it places this corpus of comedy in the context of wartime
history, economies, and tactics. This comprehensive overview
examines humor's role in shaping and reflecting the cultural
imagination of the nation during its most tumultuous period.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
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