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William B. Thesing, James Dickey's colleague at the University of
South Carolina for twenty years, has a unique and complex
perspective on the life and writing of this great twentieth-century
American author. Dickey offers readers, students, and teachers a
variety of energized and imaginative texts, and Thesing provides
original and perceptive readings of his life and his novels as well
as his most popular poems about animals in nature, man in nature,
social and sexual relationships, women, and civilian and wartime
death. This is the only introductory teaching/study guide available
on Dickey's poems and novels. Chapters are conveniently organized
around essential thematic categories. The author employs various
modern critical approaches -- from feminist criticism to
deconstruction -- to the poems and novels. The book will be useful
in college or high school courses on Southern literature, American
poetry, and twentieth-century literature.
This book offers original inroads to understanding the life and
works of the celebrated novelist and poet. In ""The Way We Read
James Dickey"" editors William B. Thesing and Theda Wrede have
assembled an outstanding collection of current critical responses
to the works of the acclaimed novelist, poet, and teacher,
including essays by Dickey's former colleagues at the University of
South Carolina and a piece by his most famous student, novelist Pat
Conroy. The volume breaks new ground in the application of
innovative critical approaches and restores Dickey to his rightful
place in the literary canon as a remarkable writer who crafted some
of the best poetry and fiction of the twentieth century. A decade
after Dickey's death and thirty-five years after the release of the
film version of his famous novel Deliverance, Dickey remains a
controversial figure in the American literary landscape. He was an
intellectual maverick who was often ahead of his time, and yet he
responded intensely, almost obsessively, to his own changing times.
Thesing and Wrede argue that, although he appeared to conform to
poetic conventions, his writing was a visionary reinterpretation
and extension of preexisting traditions. This tension between a
poet's intellectual precursors and the radical innovation of his
work is the inspiration behind the fresh approaches taken by the
contributors in this volume, just as it energized Dickey's own
endeavors. The essays offer original insights through emerging
scholarly perspectives as well as through established methods of
critique. The contributors address a range of themes in Dickey's
works, including gender, religion, humanity's relationship to
nature, and the writer's cultural context. This landmark
reappraisal of Dickey's legacy offers readers a coherent forum that
addresses why his writings remain relevant today, thus restoring
and revaluing the rising significance of Dickey's literary
achievement for twenty-first-century audiences.
A collection of biographical and critical essays on British prose
writers, 1660 to 1800. The main essay on each author provides a
chronological discussion of the author's life, works and critical
reception.
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