Norman Mailer: Works and Days/Bibliography/Criticism: Difference between revisions

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* {{Anchor|Sheets and Shaughnessy (2016)}}{{cite book |last1=Sheets |first1=Diana |last2=Shaughnessy |first2=Michael F. |date=2016 |chapter=An Interview with Diana Sheets: Norman Mailer and Tom Wolfe, Two Leaders of ‘New Journalism’ or Writers Striving to Create the ‘Great American Novel’? |title=The Doubling: Those Influential Writers That Shape Our Contemporary Perceptions of Identity and Consciousness in the New Millennium |url= |location=UK |publisher=Nova Science Publishers, Inc. |page=109–124 |isbn= |author-link= }}
* {{Anchor|Shloss (1987)}}{{cite book |last=Shloss |first=Carol |date=1987 |chapter=Norman Mailer and Combat Photography |title=In Visible Light: Photography and the American Writer, 1840-1940 |url= |location=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=233–249 |isbn= |author-link= }} Interesting consideration of the subjective-objective dilemma in ''The Naked and the Dead'' ([[48.2]]).
* {{Anchor|Shoemaker (1991)}}{{cite journal |last1=Shoemaker |first1=Steve |date=1991 |title=Norman Mailer’s ‘White Negro’: Historical Myth or Mythical History |url= |journal=Twentieth Century Literature |volume=37 |issue=fall |pages=242–260 |doi= |access-date= }} Important reconsideration via the “New Historicism” of Stephen Greenblatt.
* {{Anchor|Silverstein (1977)}}{{cite journal |last1=Silverstein |first1=Howard |date=1977 |title=Norman Mailer: The Family Romance and the Oedipal Fantasy |url= |journal=American Imago |volume=34 |issue=fall |pages=277–286 |doi= |access-date= }} Triangular relationships in the early work.
* {{Anchor|Smolla (1992)}}{{cite journal |last1=Smolla |first1=Rodney A. |date=1992 |title=''Harlot’s Ghost'' and ‘JFK’: A Fictional Conversation with Norman Mailer, Oliver Stone, Earl Warren, and Hugo Black |url= |journal=Suffolk University Law Review |volume=26 |issue=fall |pages=587–613 |doi= |access-date= }} Discussion of aesthetics and conspiracy.
* {{Anchor|Solotaroff (1974)}}{{cite book |last=Solotaroff |first=Robert |date=1972 |title=Down Mailer’s Way |url=https://archive.org/details/ert00robe |location=Urbana |publisher=University of Illinois Press |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} Rpt: Partial in [[#Lennon (1986)|Lennon (1986)]]. General survey containing a comprehensive and penetrating examination of Mailer’s existentialism and its debts to European philosophers. Contains one of the best critiques of “The White Negro” ([[59.8a]]) in print.
* {{Anchor|Staid (1972)}}{{cite journal |last1=Staid |first1=George |date=1972 |title=Mailer and Miller |url= |journal=Partisan Review |volume=4 |issue=4 |pages=616–624 |doi= |access-date= }} Thoughtful comparison.
* {{Anchor|Stark (1971)}}{{cite journal |last1=Stark |first1=John |date=1971 |title=''Barbary Shore'': The Basis of Mailer’s Best Work |url= |journal=Modern Fiction Studies |volume=17 |issue=autumn |pages=403–408 |doi= |access-date= }} The Hollingworths of Mailer and Nathaniel Hawthorne are considered.
* {{Anchor|Stone (1982)}}{{cite book |last=Stone |first=Albert E. |date=1982 |chapter=Factual Fictions: Experiments in Autobiography by Norman Mailer, Frank Conroy, Lillian Hellman |title=Autobiographical Occasions and Original Acts: Versions of American Identity from Henry Adams to Nate Shaw |url= |location=Philadelphia |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |pages=265–290, 340–342 |isbn= |author-link= }} Valuable examination of ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]) as part of the American autobiographical tradition.
* {{cite journal |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=1971 |title=Studies of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=Modern Fiction Studies |volume=17 |issue=autumn |pages=345–463 |doi= |access-date= }} Special issue containing nine essays on Mailer’s writings, and Laura Adams’s pioneering checklist of criticism.
* {{Anchor|Styron (1982)}}{{cite book |last=Styron |first=William |date=1982 |chapter=Aftermath of ‘Aftermath’ |title=This Quiet Dust and Other Writings |url=https://archive.org/details/thisquietdust00will |location=New York |publisher=Random House |pages=137–1422 |isbn= |author-link=w:William Styron }} Styron empathizes with Mailer on the Jack Abbott affair. See [[81.10]].


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