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Celine the Crippled Giant
A01=Milton Hindus
American Airlift
anti-Semitic
Author_Milton Hindus
Ballet Scenarios
Border Line
Category=NH
Chateau
Cogito Ergo Sum
controversial authorship research
Dead Man
Double Star
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eq_history
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European intellectual history
fascist ideology analysis
Ferdinand's Father
Ferdinand’s Father
French Neoclassicist
Great Pamphleteer
Indict Ment
Installment Plan
Jean Paulhan
literary anti-Semitism study
Mac Donald
Mea Culpa
modernist literature fascism intersection
Moliere
novelist's Louis Ferdinand Celine
Oubliette
political pamphleteering
Powder Keg
Restif De La Bretonne
Rich Male
Shakespeare's Caliban
Shakespeare’s Caliban
Sholem Aleichem
The Crippled Giant
Tragicomic Vision
twentieth century literature
Product details
- ISBN 9781138520165
- Weight: 453g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 15 Nov 2017
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Louis Ferdinand Céline (the pseudonym of Louis Destouches) was a famous novelist and ferocious anti-Semitic pamphleteer who rose to fame before Hitler, but perfectly represented the fascist mind-set that swept across Europe between 1932 and 1944. Never a Nazi himself, he was author of Journey to the End of the Night, Death on the Installment Plan, Guignol's Band, Homage to Zola, and a series of "pamphlets." The latter are a potpourri of racist editorials, ballet scenarios, and anti-Semitic confessions so violent that an aesthete like Andre Gide thought them parodies of other anti-Semitic literature. Little wonder the Nazis regarded Céline as a fellow-traveler. He retreated with the Nazis across the Rhine and sought refuge with them, first in Germany and then in Denmark. In 1951, he benefitted from an amnesty as a wounded veteran of both World Wars. Before his death in 1961 he had regained his popularity with the public and was regarded as a classic writer. Now that the body of his work is in translation, Céline's fame in the literary world circles the globe.Céline, perhaps more than any other analysis, helps shed some light on this enigmatic figure. It establishes his literary importance, and, at the same time, examines his anti-Semitism. After a final meeting, Hindus declared that "Celine is a splinter in my mind that I've got either to absorb completely or eject completely." The reader of this fascinating critical memoir of one of the twentieth century's most controversial literary figures is apt to be left with a similar dilemma.
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