Fr. 66.00

Philip Roth and the American Liberal Tradition

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Philip Roth and the American Liberal Tradition offers a fresh reading of the later career development of one of America's most celebrated authors. Through a contextual analysis of a select number of texts, this innovative study discusses how famed novels such as American Pastoral and The Plot against America demonstrate Philip Roth's considerable interest in mapping, by means of his unique literary talent, the changing shape and fortunes of American liberalism since the 1930s. By viewing these novels and other seminal works of his later period through a wider historical lens, this book informs readers of the myriad ways in which Roth's major phase of writing since the mid-1990s has shown considerable concern with questions of class, ethnicity, race, gender, and literary culture, all of which have been key components in the shifting intellectual and political makeup of American liberal ideology from the New Deal to our present time.
This book goes beyond a mere historical analysis by taking a new look at how Roth's experimentations in narrative style and his appeal to ahistorical notions of literary tradition rest in complex alignment with his fictional treatment of aspects of American history. This novel work of criticism demonstrates a heightened awareness of Roth's career-length fascination with the formal characteristics of fiction, making clear to its audience that any reductively linear reading of Roth as a political novelist should be avoided at all costs. Ultimately, Philip Roth and the American Liberal Tradition offers a stimulatingly intelligent approach to the art of one of America's true literary titans, providing the focused reader with a nuanced understanding of how Roth's fiction has been shaped by the various competing strains in his dual roles as a disinterested formalist aesthete, on the one hand, and as a politically engaged author on the other.

List of contents










Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Preamble: Zuckerman's Agonies in the Earlier Novels
Chapter 2: "Redface": Liberal Politics and Literary Style in I Married a Communist
Chapter 3: Shattering of the Liberal Consensus in American Pastoral
Chapter 4: "Nothing lasts, and yet nothing passes": Race and Ethnicity in The Human Stain
Chapter 5: Exit Ghost: "A book about knowing where to go for your agony"
Chapter 6: The Beginning as End: Unending Trauma in The Plot against America
Bibliography
About the Author

About the author










By Andy Connolly

Summary

This book offers a combined historical and aesthetic analysis of five novels from Philip Roth's later career. It reads these works in the context of political, cultural, and literary developments in America from the New Deal to the present.

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