Jump to content

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

m
→‎N–R: Ns and Os.
(→‎N–R: Added P and R.)
m (→‎N–R: Ns and Os.)
Line 61: Line 61:
* {{Anchor|Merrill (1992)}}{{cite book |last=Merrill |first=Robert |date=1992 |title=Norman Mailer Revisited |location=Boston |publisher=Twayne Publishers |author-link= |ref=harv}}
* {{Anchor|Merrill (1992)}}{{cite book |last=Merrill |first=Robert |date=1992 |title=Norman Mailer Revisited |location=Boston |publisher=Twayne Publishers |author-link= |ref=harv}}


===N–R===
===N===
* {{Anchor|Newlove (1969)}}{{cite magazine |last=Newlove |first=Donald |date=1969 |title=Dinner at the Lowells |url=https://classic.esquire.com/article/1969/9/1/dinner-at-the-lowells |url-access=subscription |magazine=Esquire |pages=128–129, 168, 170–178, 180, 184 |publisher= |access-date=2019-03-26 }} Lowell comments on his portrait in ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]).
* {{cite journal |last= |first= |date=1973 |title=Norman Mailer Issue |url= |journal=New Orleans Review |volume=3 |issue=3 |pages= |access-date= }} Contains three essays and an interview by Matthew Grace and Steve Roday. See [[73.14]].
 
===O===
* {{Anchor|Oates (1974)}}{{cite book |last=Oates |first=Joyce Carol |date=1974 |chapter=[[The Teleology of the Unconscious: The Art of Norman Mailer]] |title=New Heaven, New Earth: The Visionary Experience in Literature |url=https://archive.org/details/newheavenneweart00oate |location=New York |publisher=Vanguard Press |pages=170–192 |isbn= |author-link=w:Joyce Carol Oates }} Discussion of Mailer’s dualisms in ''Why Are We In Vietnam?'' ([[67.15]]) and ''Of a Fire on the Moon'' ([[71.1]]) by a novelist who “disagree[s] with nearly every one of Mailer’s stated or implied ideas.”
 
* {{Anchor|Olster (1989)}}{{cite book |last=Olster |first=Stacey |date=1989 |chapter=The Transition to Post-Modernism: Norman Mailer |title=Reminiscence and Re-creation in Contemporary American Fiction |url=https://archive.org/details/reminiscencerecr0000olst |location=Cambridge |publisher=University of Cambridge Press |pages=36–71 |isbn= |author-link= }} Mailer is seen as a transitional figure between modernism and postmodernism; focus is on his writings of the 1960s.
* {{Anchor|Ostriker (1972)}}{{cite magazine |last=Ostriker |first=Dane Proxpeals |date=November 1972 |title=Norman Mailer and the Mystery Woman or, The Rape of the C—k |url=https://classic.esquire.com/article/1972/11/1/norman-mailer-and-the-mystery-woman |url-access=subscription |magazine=Esquire |pages=122–125 |publisher= |access-date= }} Pseudonymous attack in rhymed couplets on Mailer as male chauvinist.


===P===
===P===