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  • [[Category:Works]] [[Category:Works in the 1960s]]
    471 bytes (62 words) - 16:53, 9 December 2018
  • [[Category:Works]] [[Category:Works in the 1960s]]
    544 bytes (72 words) - 18:05, 9 December 2018
  • ...y Liston fight. [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]] also comments on his 22 September 1962 debate with William F. Buckley Jr. One of Mailer’s most anthologized essa [[Category:Works]]
    542 bytes (64 words) - 07:26, 10 December 2018
  • ...nscript of a debate with William F. Buckley Jr. in Chicago on 22 September 1962, moderated by Irv Kupcinet. Debate opened with Mailer and Buckley reading s [[Category:Works]]
    503 bytes (64 words) - 10:26, 10 December 2018
  • ...-Sonny Liston fight on 25 September: Patterson will “end it with one punch in the sixth.” See [[62.15]], [[62.16]], [[62.17]], [[62.17a]], [[63.3]]. [[Category:Works]]
    514 bytes (62 words) - 21:06, 9 December 2018
  • The “Big Bite”. ''Esquire'', December, 168. Column, second in a series. Comment on the suicides of the spy, Henry Soblen, and Ernest Hemi [[Category:Works]]
    527 bytes (62 words) - 21:24, 9 December 2018
  • ...[Norman Mailer|Mailer]]’s first appearance in ''Commentary''. Rpt: Partial in [[63.37]], [[98.7]]. See [[63.16]], [[63.17]], [[63.18]], [[63.19]], [[63.2 [[Category:Works]]
    600 bytes (67 words) - 21:34, 9 December 2018
  • ...3-16, 18-23, 10. Rpt: Partial in [[63.37]], [[68.11]], [[82.16]]; complete in ''Best of “The Realist,”'' edited by Paul Krassner. Philadelphia: Runni [[Category:Works]]
    607 bytes (73 words) - 21:30, 9 December 2018
  • ...bell]], whom Mailer had secretly married on 4 May. Rpt: As “Ode to a Lady” in [[66.11]]. See [[62.9]], [[62.10]]. [[Category:Works]]
    567 bytes (75 words) - 18:07, 9 December 2018
  • ...95.38]]. He explains how he spent two months in 1962 looking at every page in Christian Zervos’s 33-volume collection of Picasso’s paintings and draw [[Category:Works]]
    683 bytes (93 words) - 17:47, 10 March 2019
  • ...e New York was in 1948.” Six of Mailer’s poems from [[62.3]] are reprinted in this issue under the title “Art of the Short Hair: Poetry by Norman Maile [[Category:Works]]
    650 bytes (95 words) - 18:09, 9 December 2018
  • ...tten for ''Playboy'' and read as part of a 22 September 1962 public debate in Chicago. Rpt: [[63.37]], [[65.14]] (partial), [[68.11]], [[98.7]] (partial) [[Category:Works]]
    678 bytes (85 words) - 09:24, 10 December 2018
  • ...of chapter 20) deals with Hubbard, Dix Butler and the invasion of Cuba in 1962. [[Category:Works]]
    758 bytes (99 words) - 18:13, 9 March 2019
  • [[Category:Works]] [[Category:Works in the 1960s]]
    797 bytes (111 words) - 20:58, 9 December 2018
  • ...bors of the Moon” in [[63.37]], [[84.17]] and [[98.7]]; and “Togetherness” in 98.7. See [[62.5]], [[62.7]], [[64.2]]. ...those electronic canyons where a myriad of fine moments were forever dying in the iridescence of foam.|author=Norman Mailer |source=71.31}}
    3 KB (439 words) - 09:21, 30 July 2019
  • ...MacGregor. ''New York Post Magazine'', 4 March, 11. At the Algonquin Hotel in New York, [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]] discusses his new book of poetry, ''Deat [[Category:Works]]
    656 bytes (102 words) - 18:04, 9 December 2018
  • ...confirms reports that he has divorced his second wife, [[Adele Morales]], in Juarez, Mexico, but won’t confirm (accurate) reports that he had wed Lady [[Category:Works]]
    826 bytes (120 words) - 20:44, 9 December 2018
  • ...]], [[67.11]], [[82.19]]; ''Evergreen Review Reader: A Ten Year Anthology, 1962–1967'', Vol. II, edited by Barney Rosset. New York: Grove Press, 1980. [[Category:Works]]
    506 bytes (60 words) - 21:01, 9 December 2018
  • ...cture and air conditioning as examples. He also commented on his September 1962 Chicago debate with William F. Buckley, Jr., describing Buckley’s debate [[Category:Works]]
    906 bytes (119 words) - 12:14, 26 May 2020
  • ...William Burroughs’s ''Naked Lunch'', from his comments on Burroughs at the 1962 Edinburgh conference on the current state of the novel, and from interviews [[Category:Works]]
    981 bytes (127 words) - 10:19, 10 March 2019
  • ...an Mailer|Mailer]] ends his introduction with a reprinting of the 30 March 1962 ''Time'' review of the first edition of ''Deaths for the Ladies'' ([[62.3]] ...rage, and the feeling that the enemy was more alive than ever, and dirtier in the alley, and so one had to mend, and put on the armor, and go to war, go
    967 bytes (149 words) - 15:15, 18 December 2018
  • ...testimony in support of ''Naked Lunch'' at its June 1965 censorship trial in Boston is also quoted, 195–200. The entire story is told again by the chi [[Category:Works]]
    1 KB (151 words) - 06:24, 8 August 2019
  • ...llectively titled “Hemingway Revisited.” The Hemingway poems also appeared in ''Paris Review'' (see [[03.28]]). Interspersed with the poems are about 100 [[Category:Works]]
    1 KB (193 words) - 14:28, 26 April 2019
  • ...description of her in ''Esquire'' (see [[62.12]]) when she gave a February 1962 tour of the White House on national television. Schlesinger also reports be [[Category:Works]]
    2 KB (293 words) - 05:59, 6 May 2021
  • ...so trying to give up smoking, and the advertisements in this book, printed in italics, are testimony to the different way I was now obliged to use langua
    5 KB (698 words) - 07:33, 5 June 2020
  • ==Works by Norman Mailer== * {{cite book |last=Mailer |first=Norman |authormask=1 |date=1962 |title=Deaths for the Ladies and Other Disasters |url= |location=New York |
    5 KB (708 words) - 11:09, 4 July 2020
  • ...stin,}} announced the acquisition of the entire [[Norman Mailer]] archive. In response to the question “Why Texas?” Mailer commented, ...erica. What the hell. Since it’s going to Texas, let’s say one of the best in the world.}}
    14 KB (2,291 words) - 07:41, 8 July 2021
  • .... Each are divided according to work. Abbreviations that were not included in {{harvtxt|Lennon|2008a|}} or {{harvtxt|Adams|1974|}} are new to this projec | 1962
    11 KB (1,482 words) - 19:32, 7 July 2024
  • ...the final chapter, when Rojack confronts Kelly in his penthouse apartment in the Waldorf Towers. ...bestseller list on 11 April 1965.</ref> and went through several printings in both hard and soft cover. It has been translated into several languages and
    28 KB (4,564 words) - 15:11, 28 May 2020
  • ...e'' or ''Why Are We in Vietnam?''; or he may succeed in his experiment, as in ''An American Dream''. ...substantial investment (both in finances and reputation) which he has made in them.
    15 KB (2,502 words) - 05:47, 21 September 2020
  • ...ve developed in the mid-century science fiction context, but Mailer excels in using the conventions of the genre to present a prescient recognition of ma ...office received a rush of change-of- address forms with a post office box in Santa Fe—near Los Alamos—as the new address. The tale may well be apocr
    38 KB (5,938 words) - 09:53, 26 February 2021
  • ...the Picasso’s work that gave a new imperative to his own culture-readings. In his relationship with the lives of Marilyn Monroe and Pablo Picasso, Mailer ...bout it, since although “the ambitious dialogues”{{sfn|Mailer|1965|p=261}} in both ''The Presidential Papers'' and ''Cannibals and Christians'' owe much
    41 KB (6,838 words) - 08:49, 8 July 2021
  • Begun in 2015, the Norman Mailer Society Podcast is the brainchild of host and creat ...2-25 || style="min-width: 175px;" | Podcast Premiere: J. Michael Lennon || In this inaugural episode of the Norman Mailer Society Podcast, host [[Justin
    22 KB (3,167 words) - 10:07, 29 July 2019
  • ...first=Maggie|note=Excerpted from ''Masculinity and the Paradox of Violence in American Fiction, 1950-1975'' and reprinted here with the permission of the ...e moments when Mailer himself interrogates these violences and their roles in shaping gender identity.
    38 KB (5,891 words) - 14:06, 28 June 2020
  • ...=Much of the following has been incorporated into ''[[NM:WD|Norman Mailer: Works and Days]]''.|url=http://prmlr.us/mr13zin}} ...|author-mask=1|date=2018 |chapter= ‘The Big Bite’: November and December, 1962; January and March, 1963|title=Norman Mailer: Collected Essays of the 1960s
    41 KB (5,384 words) - 15:27, 30 April 2021
  • ...s professional football is today. But boxing occupied a more central place in the national psyche: it raised racial and political issues thanks to such i ...irst Ali-Frazier fight. It’s a measure of how much the country has changed in the last four decades that it is almost impossible to imagine a mainstream
    21 KB (3,456 words) - 06:39, 6 July 2020
  • ...ented a paper with this title at the 2015 Norman Mailer Society Conference in Provincetown, MA.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr16pepp}} ...who work at short stories.”{{sfn|Mailer|1981|p=9}} His clinching argument in the form of a “terrible confession” is that “he thinks the short stor
    21 KB (3,623 words) - 08:50, 18 September 2021
  • ...invidious. The screenplay remains unpublished. Mailer’s incisive comments in his prefatory note before the original story on the nature of successful fi ...tect. That, scientist and friends, is bound to be the measure of the error in the next prophecy.
    48 KB (8,606 words) - 12:05, 1 March 2021
  • ...An examination of the dimensions, complications, and rewards of collecting works by Norman Mailer. |url=https://prmlr.us/mr03ahe }} definitely a good artist. Others must agree because, in my experience, many
    83 KB (10,805 words) - 09:16, 28 June 2021
  • ...Gwaltney?” he went on to ask his interviewer. “Gwaltney and I were buddies in the Philippines. We went into different companies so we didn’t see exactl ...red. He later told Edward de Grazia that “fug” was used for “fuck” because in the 1940s “you just couldn’t get near it”; see {{harvtxt|Lennon|2013|
    24 KB (4,002 words) - 07:15, 4 July 2020
  • ..., Mailer produces a book that is long, intricately built and absorbing, if in places marred by familiar bits of Mailer’s hyper-rational exuberance. Wha ...s refer to as epistemology-lite where we may still make the effort to stay in the know but do so by skimming, not reading for depth, and routinely end ou
    41 KB (6,867 words) - 15:19, 27 June 2021
  • ...s piece prefigure and announce the new mode of Mailer’s nonfiction writing in the late 1960s and 1970s, notably ''[[The Armies of the Night]]'', it is th ...source of perception about the human condition. In fact, in his 1993 essay in ''Esquire'', “The Best Move Lies Next to the Worst,” he deals with his
    28 KB (4,578 words) - 08:53, 8 July 2021
  • ...man Mailer’s reception of various modes of sociocultural inheritance.|note=In memory of Robert W. Lewis.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr10nakj}} ...btain a history that has the character of a process when the succession of works is mediated not only through the producing subject but also through the con
    65 KB (9,811 words) - 08:44, 11 October 2020
  • {{dc|dc=W|rites Mailer in “The White Negro” in 1957:}} “At bottom, the drama of the psychopath is that he seeks love. No ...sed orgone boxes. As Old Bull Lee (Burroughs) tells Sal Paradise (Kerouac) in ''On the Road'', {{" '}}Say, why don’t you fellows try my orgone accumula
    35 KB (5,585 words) - 07:28, 21 September 2020
  • ...’ system for a proposed, compressed edition of the journal to be published in the future and to include the Mailer-Lindner correspondence. [This system h ...vous. The true history of the mind is not preserved in learned volumes but in the living mental organism of everyone.|author=[[w:Carl Jung|Carl Jung]]|so
    64 KB (10,074 words) - 09:53, 17 May 2021
  • ...iler’s non­ fiction voice, which is to reach its finest expression to date in ''The Armies of the Night'' (1968). ...himself at the time is parallel to that of Fitzgerald in his slump. Early in the book, he tells us:
    42 KB (7,087 words) - 11:06, 4 July 2020
  • ...th powers unknown, helped to twist and turn us unproductively inward while in the background arose a damnable Asian war that left us mocking the principl ...the 1960s, spun inside out in the 1970s, and set before a fun-house mirror in the 1980s, we remained consumed by the mysteries of the self. Our unswervin
    36 KB (6,105 words) - 09:33, 25 June 2021
  • ...that everyone has been asking since the day Oswald himself was gunned down in full view of the television public: Did he do it? And, if so, why? |url=htt {{dc|dc=S|o, comes now Norman Mailer in the year 1995,}} to the High Court of Public Opinion, as he inevitably must
    40 KB (6,790 words) - 06:55, 1 July 2021
  • ...el |note=Abbreviations for titles of books by and about Mailer referred to in the notes are linked or may be found on “[[Norman Mailer's First Editions ...in print. Random House will publish a selected edition of Mailer’s letters in 2008, edited by Lennon.
    77 KB (14,243 words) - 07:27, 8 July 2021
  • ...this paper was given at the 2008 Norman Mailer Conference, October 16–18, in Provincetown, MA.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr03vin}} ...ange loops, and “metaphorical fugues” are dealt with by Douglas Hofstadter in his ''Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid'' (Basic Books, 1979).
    51 KB (8,331 words) - 08:53, 23 June 2021
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