The Mailer Review/Volume 4, 2010/Authorship and Alienation in Death in the Afternoon and Advertisements for Myself: Difference between revisions

Added additional paragraphs up to page 262.
Edited Dante's work in works cited to properly format in translator.
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{{cite magazine |last= Costronovo|first= David|date= 2003|title= Norman Mailer as Mid-Century Advertisment|magazine= The New England Review|pages= 174-194|ref=harv }}
{{cite magazine |last= Costronovo|first= David|date= 2003|title= Norman Mailer as Mid-Century Advertisment|magazine= The New England Review|pages= 174-194|ref=harv }}


{{cite book |last= Dante|first= Alighieri|date= 1994|title= The Divine Comedy: Inferno |location= New York|publisher= Farrar, Straus and Giroux |translator= Robert Pinsky|ref=harv }}
{{cite book |last= Dante|first= Alighieri|date= 1994|title= The Divine Comedy: Inferno| translator-last= Pinsky| translator-first= Robert|location= New York|publisher= Farrar, Straus and Giroux |ref=harv }}


{{cite book |last= Hemingway|first= Ernest|date= 1932 |title= Death in the Afternoon|location= New York|publisher= Scribner's|ref=harv }}
{{cite book |last= Hemingway|first= Ernest|date= 1932 |title= Death in the Afternoon|location= New York|publisher= Scribner's|ref=harv }}