The Mailer Review/Volume 2, 2008/The Heart of the Nation: Jewish Values in the Fiction of Norman Mailer: Difference between revisions

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{{Byline|last=Bernstein|first=Mashey|abstract=In the past year or so, as a result of the publication of ''[[The Castle in the Forest]]'', Mailer has tackled his “Jewish question” in a way that brings him, if not back to the “nice” Jewish boy image he eschewed many years ago, at least to an acknowledgement of that past in a way that embraces it with new warmth and understanding. Mailer’s ideology, as an American writer and social commentator, stems from both the intellectual ideas of Judaism and how these ideas make themselves manifest in our daily lives.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr08bern|}}  
{{Byline|last=Bernstein|first=Mashey|abstract=In the past year or so, as a result of the publication of ''[[The Castle in the Forest]]'', Mailer has tackled his “Jewish question” in a way that brings him, if not back to the “nice” Jewish boy image he eschewed many years ago, at least to an acknowledgement of that past in a way that embraces it with new warmth and understanding. Mailer’s ideology, as an American writer and social commentator, stems from both the intellectual ideas of Judaism and how these ideas make themselves manifest in our daily lives.|url=https://prmlr.us/mr08bern|}}