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Since the war Graham Greene has travelled habitually to the world's
trouble-spots and has provided leading newspapers and journals with
articles about what he saw. While contending that a writer must be
free of political affiliations he has commmitted himself to many
countries and causes, and while insisting that literature must
never be used for political ends he has written novels informed by
a political urgency. The Dangerous Edge is about his political
reportage and how the observations that formed it were transformed
into literature. It is about how a novelist who struggled to record
public issues dispassionately became in the process an important
political conscience.
This book contains deeply personal dialogues with Jewish American
writers, from Mark Krupnick in his final work. When he learned he
had ALS and roughly two years to live, literary critic Mark
Krupnick returned to the writers who had been his lifelong
conversation partners and asked with renewed intensity: how do you
live as a Jew, when, mostly, you live in your head? The evocative
and sinuous essays collected here are the products of this inquiry.
In his search for durable principles, Krupnick follows Lionel
Trilling, Cynthia Ozick, Geoffrey Hartman, Philip Roth, Saul
Bellow, and others into the elemental matters of life and death,
sex and gender, power and vulnerability. The editors - Krupnick's
wife, Jean K. Carney, and literary critic Mark Shechner - have also
included earlier essays and introductions that link Krupnick's work
with the ""deep places"" of his own imagination.
Since the war Graham Greene has travelled habitually to the world's
trouble-spots and has provided leading newspapers and journals with
articles about what he saw. While contending that a writer must be
free of political affiliations he has commmitted himself to many
countries and causes, and while insisting that literature must
never be used for political ends he has written novels informed by
a political urgency. The Dangerous Edge is about his political
reportage and how the observations that formed it were transformed
into literature. It is about how a novelist who struggled to record
public issues dispassionately became in the process an important
political conscience.
The Edward Lewis Wallant Award was founded by the family of Dr.
Irving and Fran Waltman in 1963 and is supported by the University
of Hartford's Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies. It is
given annually to an American writer, preferably early in his or
her career, whose fiction is considered significant for American
Jews. In The New Diaspora: The Changing Landscape of American
Jewish Fiction, editors Victoria Aarons, Avinoam J. Patt, and Mark
Shechner who have all served as judges for the award, present
vital, original, and wide-ranging fiction by writers whose work has
been considered or selected for the award. The resulting collection
highlights the exemplary place of the Wallant Award in Jewish
literature. With a mix of stories and novel chapters, The New
Diaspora reprints selections of short fiction from such well-known
writers as Rebecca Goldstein, Nathan Englander, Jonathan Safran
Foer, Dara Horn, Julie Orringer, and Nicole Krauss. The first half
of the anthology presents pieces by winnners of the Wallant award,
focusing on the best work of recent winners. The New Diaspora's
second half reflects the evolving landscape of American Jewish
fiction over the last fifty years, as many authors working in
America are not American by birth, and their fiction has become
more experimental in nature. Pieces in this section represent
authors with roots all over the world - including Russia (Maxim
Shrayer, Nadia Kalman, and Lara Vapnyar), Latvia (David Bezmozgis),
South Africa (Tony Eprile), Canada (Robert Majzels), and Israel
(Avner Mandelman, who now lives in Canada). This collection offers
an expanded canon of Jewish writing in North America and
foregrounds a vision of its variety, its uniqueness, its
cosmopolitanism, and its evolving perspectives on Jewish life. It
celebrates the continuing vitality and fresh visions of
contemporary Jewish writing, even as it highlights its debt to
history and embrace of collective memory. Readers of contemporary
American fiction and Jewish cultural history will find The New
Diaspora enlightening and deeply engaging. Contributors Include:
Edith Pearlman, Sara Houghteling, Eileen Pollack, Ehud Havazelet,
Nicole Krauss, Jonathan Rosen, Joan Leegant, Dara Horn, Myla
Goldberg, Harvey Grossinger, Thane Rosenbaum, Rebecca Goldstein,
Melvin Bukiet, Tova Reich, Steve Stern, Francine Prose, Nadia
Kalman, Maxim Shrayer, David Bezmozgis, Avner Mandelman, Joseph
Epstein, Scott Nadelson, Margot Singer, Jonathan Safran Foer, Aryeh
Lev Stollman, Gerald Shapiro, Joshua Henkin, Curt Leviant, Robert
Majzels, Tony Eprile, Rachel Kadish, Nathan Englander, Lara
Vapnyar, Julie Orringer, Joseph Skibell, Peter Orner, Jonathon
Keats.
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1974.
"Up Society's Ass Copper: Rereading Philip Roth is the culmination
of thirty years of writing about Roth. A collection of essays and
reviews, fulminations and daydreams, hasty claims and later
retractions, it combines vivid first impressions with conclusions
that have been percolating for decades. Its alloy of hunches,
impressions, and judgments is the record of a restless and
sometimes impatient reader trying to make sense of a turbulent and
mercurial writer. I try to get at bedrock issues in Roth's writing
without letting those issues distract me from the detours,
anecdotes, impersonations, punch lines, send ups, pratfalls,
visions, mutterings, and trash talk that are the purest
distillations of Roth's art. Its working premise is that Roth "does
what he does because he does what he does" and that the surest way
to get a handle on him is not to be insistent and to allow each
book to be unique, surprising, and strange."--Mark Shechner
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1974.
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