Template:BYLINE: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Created page with "{{byline | align = left|right (right is default) | type = Written|Edited (Written is default) | last = Sanders | first = J'aime L. | abstract = An exploration of Hemingway’s influence on Mailer’s existentialism and his philosophy of art, focusing on the aspects of their commensurate interest in the violent and disturbing as it relates to their philosophies of writing and art, and reveals how both writers put their existentially founded philos..." |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
| type = Written|Edited (Written is default) | | type = Written|Edited (Written is default) | ||
| last = Sanders | | last = Sanders | ||
| first = J' | | first = J'aimé L. | ||
| abstract = An exploration of Hemingway’s influence on Mailer’s existentialism and his philosophy of art, focusing on the aspects of their commensurate interest in the violent and disturbing as it relates to their philosophies of writing and art, and reveals how both writers put their existentially founded philosophies in motion in order to teach readers how to live in the highly modern and post-modernized consumer culture both authors question and reject throughout their canon of works. | | abstract = An exploration of Hemingway’s influence on Mailer’s existentialism and his philosophy of art, focusing on the aspects of their commensurate interest in the violent and disturbing as it relates to their philosophies of writing and art, and reveals how both writers put their existentially founded philosophies in motion in order to teach readers how to live in the highly modern and post-modernized consumer culture both authors question and reject throughout their canon of works. | ||
| url = https://prmlr.us/mr04sanders) | | url = https://prmlr.us/mr04sanders) | ||
}} | }} | ||
Latest revision as of 21:41, 30 April 2025
Written by
J'aimé L. Sanders
Abstract: An exploration of Hemingway’s influence on Mailer’s existentialism and his philosophy of art, focusing on the aspects of their commensurate interest in the violent and disturbing as it relates to their philosophies of writing and art, and reveals how both writers put their existentially founded philosophies in motion in order to teach readers how to live in the highly modern and post-modernized consumer culture both authors question and reject throughout their canon of works.
URL: https://prmlr.us/mr04sanders)
J'aimé L. Sanders
Abstract: An exploration of Hemingway’s influence on Mailer’s existentialism and his philosophy of art, focusing on the aspects of their commensurate interest in the violent and disturbing as it relates to their philosophies of writing and art, and reveals how both writers put their existentially founded philosophies in motion in order to teach readers how to live in the highly modern and post-modernized consumer culture both authors question and reject throughout their canon of works.
URL: https://prmlr.us/mr04sanders)