By showing that Joseph Heller was heavily influenced by the New Criticism and myth criticism that he studied in graduate school, this book discloses that Catch-22 is a faithful and inclusive retelling of the ancient epic of Gilgamesh, much as Joyce’s Ulysses famously recapitulates Homer’s Odyssey . This book shows that what previous critics have understood to be characteristics of the absurdist and Black Humor influence are derived from Heller’s faithfulness to the Babylonian text itself. The study details Heller’s use of a mystical and Jungian framework to portray the individuation of a modern hero through his struggles with the mythic and archetypal forces of irrationalism as they are manifested in modern civilization. Revealing that Heller’s conception is religious and mystical, this book explores Heller’s use of T. S. Eliot’s mythic method and the experimental techniques of Joyce’s Finnegans Wake . The themes of race, homosexuality, individuation, sado-masochism, and modernity are dealt with at length.
Jon Woodson Knihy
Autorova tvorba nesie stopy surrealistického vnímania sveta, ktoré sa formovalo už v detstve uprostred povojnového Nemecka. Počiatočné zážitky s literatúrou, ako je dielo Samuela Becketta, a neskôr s avantgardnými smermi ho nasmerovali k skúmaniu hlbších vrstiev amerického modernizmu. Jeho akademické bádanie sa sústreďuje na esoterické a okultné vplyvy v dielach významných amerických autorov, odhaľujúc skryté významy a nekonvenčné perspektívy. Táto záľuba v neobvyklých pohľadoch sa dnes odráža v jeho humorne ladených komiksových románoch.


Anthems, Sonnets, and Chants
Recovering the African American Poetry of the 1930s
- 286 stránok
- 11 hodin čítania
The 1930s were marked by significant challenges for African Americans, including the Great Depression, an identity crisis, and the looming threat of a race war due to the Italo-Ethiopian conflict. This era saw a surge in black poetry that expressed new forms of autonomy and resistance to social hardships. However, much of this impactful protest poetry was often labeled as "romantic" and overlooked by prominent leftist critics and anthologists, despite its profound significance in capturing the struggles and resilience of the time.