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The first book of literary criticism to examine this Pulitzer Prize winner's entire body of work

As a renowned novelist, journalist, biographer, playwright, speaker, aspiring politician, filmmaker, and public intellectual, Norman Mailer was one of the most prominent American literary and cultural figures of the second half of the twentieth century. Over the course of his expansive sixty-year career, Mailer published nearly forty original works of fiction and nonfiction, served as a counterculture activist, and was cofounder of the Village Voice. Twice awarded the Pulitzer Prize, Mailer also received the National Book Award and the Medal of Distinguished Contribution to Arts and Letters, a lifetime achievement award granted by the National Book Foundation.

Understanding Norman Mailer is the first book of literary criticism to address Mailer's impressive body of work in its entirety, from his first publication to his last. Situating these volumes in their historical and cultural context, Maggie McKinley traces the major themes and philosophies that pervade Mailer's canon, analyzing his representations of gender, sexuality, violence, technology, politics, faith, celebrity, existentialism, and national identity. McKinley moves chronologically through Mailer's career, illuminating the many genres, styles, and perspectives with which Mailer experimented over time, demonstrating his remarkable artistic reach. McKinley also addresses Mailer's reputation as a combative public figure who, amid controversy surrounding his personal life and public persona, remained committed to lively intellectual debate.

Through Understanding Norman Mailer, an accessible introduction to Mailer's life and work, McKinley offers a unique retrospective, articulating the development and changes within Mailer's ideas over time while highlighting concerns that remained at the center of his work for decades.


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Date de parution

06 novembre 2017

Nombre de lectures

1

EAN13

9781611178067

Langue

English

UNDERSTANDING NORMAN MAILER
UNDERSTANDING CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN LITERATURE
Matthew J. Bruccoli, Founding Editor
Linda Wagner-Martin, Series Editor
UNDERSTANDING
NORMAN MAILER
Maggie McKinley

The University of South Carolina Press
2017 University of South Carolina
Published by the University of South Carolina Press
Columbia, South Carolina 29208
www.sc.edu/uscpress
26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data can be found at http://catalog.loc.gov/
ISBN 978-1-61117-805-0 (cloth)
ISBN 978-1-61117-806-7 (ebook)
Front cover photograph: Ulf Andersen
www.ulfandersen.photoshelter.com
Thanks to all of my family and friends for their unwavering support. Special thanks go to Mike Lennon and everyone involved with the Mailer Society.
CONTENTS
Series Editor s Preface
Chapter 1 Understanding Norman Mailer
Chapter 2 The Naked and the Dead and Its Aftermath
Chapter 3 An American Voice and An American Dream
Chapter 4 Mailer on War, Women, Politics, and Film
Chapter 5 Exploring American Mysteries: Mailer s Interpretive Biographies
Chapter 6 The Divided Self across Genre: Novels of the 1980s and 1990s
Chapter 7 Concluding with Questions
Notes
Bibliography
Index
SERIES EDITOR S PREFACE
The Understanding Contemporary American Literature series was founded by the estimable Matthew J. Bruccoli (1931-2008), who envisioned these volumes as guides or companions for students as well as good nonacademic readers, a legacy that will continue as new volumes are developed to fill in gaps among the nearly one hundred series volumes published to date and to embrace a host of new writers only now making their marks on our literature.
As Professor Bruccoli explained in his preface to the volumes he edited, because much influential contemporary literature makes special demands, the word understanding in the titles was chosen deliberately. Many willing readers lack an adequate understanding of how contemporary literature works; that is, of what the author is attempting to express and the means by which it is conveyed. Aimed at fostering this understanding of good literature and good writers, the criticism and analysis in the series provide instruction in how to read certain contemporary writers-explicating their material, language, structures, themes, and perspectives-and facilitate a more profitable experience of the works under discussion.
In the twenty-first century Professor Bruccoli s prescience gives us an avenue to publish expert critiques of significant contemporary American writing. The series continues to map the literary landscape and to provide both instruction and enjoyment. Future volumes will seek to introduce new voices alongside canonized favorites, to chronicle the changing literature of our times, and to remain, as Professor Bruccoli conceived, contemporary in the best sense of the word.
Linda Wagner-Martin, Series Editor
CHAPTER 1
Understanding Norman Mailer
One of Norman Mailer s favorite quotes was that offered by Nobel Prize-winning author Andr Gide: Do not understand me too quickly. 1 Thus, there would seem to be a certain irony in penning a book titled Understanding Norman Mailer , for in both his life and his work, Mailer embodied Gide s remark, resisting any easy exegesis or conclusions. However, it is precisely because of his investment in dialectic, intellectual rigor, and occasional elusiveness that Mailer s body of work can reflect the true intent of this book.
Understanding Norman Mailer does not purport to reach an irrefutable understanding of the author or his work, but to recognize that the process of deriving meaning from literature is an ongoing project. Such a project requires coming to terms with the idea that the answers are less important, perhaps, than the questions. As Mailer himself stated, It is worth remembering that in life, as in other mysteries, there are no answers, only questions, but part of the pleasure of intellection is to refine the question, or discover a new one. 2 Moreover, while the endeavor to understand Mailer may be asymptotic, approaching but never reaching an endpoint, any serious attempt to appreciate and comprehend his work is still undeniably instructive and revelatory, as his work illuminates many of the dark corners of both the individual psyche and contemporary American culture at large.
Life and Career: An Overview
As a renowned novelist, journalist, biographer, playwright, speaker, aspiring politician, filmmaker, and public intellectual, Norman Mailer can be deemed one of the central literary and cultural figures of twentieth-century America, and certainly one of the most prolific. Yet Mailer did not grow up envisioning a career as a writer. Born in 1923 in Long Branch, New Jersey, and raised in Brooklyn, Mailer attended Harvard with the goal of becoming an engineer. His elective writing classes at Harvard captured his interest and shifted his focus, however, and while there, Mailer wrote approximately thirty short stories, a novella titled A Calculus at Heaven , and two novels- A Transit To Narcissus and No Percentage . While there were bumps in the road (one of his stories reduced his classmates to laughter-and it was not intended to be a comedy), he eventually earned the respect of both his writing professors and a few editors in the publishing world. In fact, A Calculus at Heaven was published in an anthology, Cross-Section: A Collection of New American Writing , in 1944. ( A Transit to Narcissus would not be published until 1978, when it was released as a limited facsimile, and No Percentage has never been published.) Ultimately, though, it was his experience as an enlisted soldier stationed in the Pacific during World War II that provided him with material for his first major novel, The Naked and the Dead , which he published in 1948 at the age of twenty-five. The novel immediately became a commercial best seller and critical success, and the sudden fame it garnered made him the darling of the literary world. While the levels of public and critical admiration would shift and change over the ensuing decades, Mailer remained a renowned public figure throughout his lifetime, a status with which he himself would often grapple, as this lifelong celebrity intruded on but also informed his writing-something he addresses directly in works such as The Armies of the Night (1968) and Marilyn (1973).
After the success of The Naked and the Dead , Mailer continued to publish steadily until his death in 2007 at the age of eighty-four. Over the course of his expansive sixty-year career, Mailer published nearly forty original works of fiction and nonfiction, crossing a wide spectrum of style and genre, as well as numerous articles and essays for various well-known publications, including Esquire, Commentary, Life, Playboy, Dissent , and the Village Voice , the latter of which he also helped to found. From the 1950s through the 1970s, a period often seen as the height of Mailer s visibility and notoriety, his output was particularly impressive. In the 1960s alone, for example, he published two novels, a collection of short stories, two essay collections, and two full-length works of nonfiction, while also directing three experimental films and and adapting his novel The Deer Park into a play. He won the Pulitzer Prize twice: once in 1969 for The Armies of the Night (for which he also received the National Book Award), and again in 1980 for The Executioner s Song . In 2005, Mailer was honored with the Medal of Distinguished Contribution to Arts and Letters, a lifetime achievement award granted by the National Book Foundation.
In addition to his lifelong commitment to writing and his foray into film, Mailer also embraced the role of public intellectual. He frequently engaged in public debates (most notably with his right-wing counterpart, William F. Buckley), appeared on television shows, and gave various lectures covering a number of cultural and political topics. As a result, Mailer became a revered, if also contentious, public figure during the height of his career. The 1960s and 1970s saw the apex of Mailer s celebrity-during this time he participated in the 1967 march on the Pentagon to protest the war in Vietnam, and was arrested in the process (an experience that he covers in The Armies of the Night ). He also made waves in the political sector by running for mayor of New York in the 1969 Democratic primary alongside fellow author and journalist Jimmy Breslin, and he maintained high levels of visibility in the literary world by not only publishing fiction and nonfiction, but also penning a regular column in Esquire titled The Big Bite.
The 1960s were, in many ways, the height not only of Mailer s fame but also his infamy. For example, his mayoral campaign (which Mailer s authorized biographer Michael Lennon has called the operative definition of quixotic ) was hit by some bad press when Mailer was revealed to have berated some of his campaign staff, calling them a bunch of spoiled pigs. 3 Though this was not the primary factor in Mailer s fourth-place finish out of five candidates (he was, after all, the underdog and a long shot in the race), it did contribute to the reputation he had begun to steadily acquire over the previous years as a bombastic, egotistical womanizer, a hot-headed, heavy-drinking individual always ready for a fight (a reputation sometimes deserved, albeit a reductive view of his character). Contributing to this was his tendency to incite the ire of the women s liberation movement with a variety of inflammatory comments, some intended to be facetious and others intended to be serious reflections of his own theories of gende

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