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Philip Roth Considered
Philip Roth Considered
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A01=Steven Milowitz
Aharon Appelfeld
American Jewish literature
Anatomy Lesson
Anne Frank
Author_Steven Milowitz
Black Milk
Category=DSBH
characters
concentrationary
Concentrationary Universe
David Kepesh
Denser
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Holocaust influence on American fiction
Holocaust memory studies
Holocaust Writing
intergenerational guilt analysis
literary dehumanization themes
Love Love Love
nathan
Notoriety
operation
Operation Shylock
Personae
Pod
Portnoy's Complaint
postwar moral philosophy
Pyotor Verkhovensky
roth's
Roth's Characters
Roth's Children
Roth's Fiction
Roth's Works
rothian
Short Hills
shylock
trauma and narrative
universe
White Clown
works
Writing American Fiction
Young Man
zuckerman
Zuckerman Bound
Zuckerman Unbound
Product details
- ISBN 9781138978393
- Weight: 453g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 20 Jan 2016
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
This book comprehensively surveys Philip Roth's published and unpublished works, focusing on the thematic unity which binds them together: the memory of the Holocaust and the altered universe born of that memory. The Holocaust is understood as the orienting event for Roth's fiction and non-fiction, the force that surrounds the characters and the narratives at all times. Roth's obsession with questions of the Holocaust, questions of responsibility, meaning, and powerlessness, explains his recurring discussion of entrapment, dehumanization, nihilism, guilt, and coercion. The concentrationary universe of the title is defined, in this work, as not only the universe of camps, but also the universe that exists after the devastation. Moral and philosophical norms are revoked in this new world. Roth's early works are presented on a desolate landscape. The introduction explicates this landscape, specifically by invoking an early play of Roth's, a play which is set in a Jewish ghetto during the Holocaust. This unpublished work introduces the historical period that shapes the visions of Roth's future protagonists. The next three chapters study Roth's relentless excavation of the dilemmas of fathers, mothers, authority figures, and the inner discord of need and purpose. These seemingly quotidian problems are exacerbated and intensified by the Holocaust's shadowy presence. No relationship, no effort at fulfillment, no action is untempered by history in Roth's varied fictions. Chapters four and five look directly at Roth's allusions to the Holocaust. They explore, through each of Roth's works, how the Holocaust-thematic -the play of ideology and nihilism-and the Holocaust-pattern -the idea of the past encroaching upon the present -work through Roth's career, informing his readers not only of his fascination with the Holocaust, but of his particularly human way of dealing with it. The last chapter briefly summarizes the findings of the previous chapter and connects Roth's specific concentrationary universe to the larger world. The linguistic clues of Roth's novels are revealed and investigated, pointing to Roth's celebration of ambiguity and individuality as parts of an imperfect formula for writing and living in the debased aftermath of the Holocaust.
Philip Roth Considered
€45.99
