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

Fixed some instances where text needed to be italicized and added in-text citations.
m Changed spelling of "Costronovo" to "Castronvo."
Line 194: Line 194:
{{Cite book| author-last= Bruccoli|author-first= Matthew J.|date= 1996|title= The Only Thing That Counts: Ernest Hemingway-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence|location= New York|publisher= Scribner|ref=harv}}
{{Cite book| author-last= Bruccoli|author-first= Matthew J.|date= 1996|title= The Only Thing That Counts: Ernest Hemingway-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence|location= New York|publisher= Scribner|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 magazine |last= Castronovo|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| translator-last= Pinsky| translator-first= Robert|location= New York|publisher= Farrar, Straus and Giroux |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 }}