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{{Bib}} | {{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-size:22px;">{{BASEPAGENAME}}/</span>{{SUBPAGENAME}}}} | ||
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===A=== | ===A=== | ||
{{Shortcut|WD:Crit}} | {{Shortcut|WD:Crit}} | ||
* {{Anchor|Adams (1976)}}{{cite book |last=Adams |first=Laura |date=1976 |title=Existential Battles: The Growth of Norman Mailer |url=https://archive.org/details/existentialbattl0000adam |location=Athens |publisher=Ohio University Press |page= |author-link= }} Good discussion of themes and techniques, especially early narrators; includes description of extra-literary activities. | * {{Anchor|Adams (1976)}}{{cite book |last=Adams |first=Laura |date=1976 |title=Existential Battles: The Growth of Norman Mailer |url=https://archive.org/details/existentialbattl0000adam |location=Athens |publisher=Ohio University Press |page= |author-link= }} Good discussion of themes and techniques, especially early narrators; includes description of extra-literary activities. | ||
* {{Anchor|Adams (1974)}}{{cite book |editor-last=Adams |editor-first=Laura |editor-mask=1 |date=1974 |title=Will the Real Norman Mailer Please Stand Up |url=https://archive.org/details/willrealnormanma00adam |location=Port Washington, NY |publisher=Kennikat Press |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} Fourteen essays and reviews and one interview examining Mailer’s protean activities. Includes two essays on Mailer’s cosmology, a long bibliography and Adams’s useful introduction. | * {{Anchor|Adams (1974)}}{{cite book |editor-last=Adams |editor-first=Laura |editor-mask=1 |date=1974 |title=Will the Real Norman Mailer Please Stand Up |url=https://archive.org/details/willrealnormanma00adam |location=Port Washington, NY |publisher=Kennikat Press |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} Fourteen essays and reviews and one interview examining Mailer’s protean activities. Includes two essays on Mailer’s cosmology, a long bibliography and Adams’s useful introduction. | ||
* {{Anchor|Aldridge (1992)}}{{cite book |last=Aldridge |first=John W. |date=1992 |title=Classics and Contemporaries |url= |location=Columbia |publisher=University of Missouri Press |pages=54–58 |isbn= |author-link=w:John W. Aldridge }} Contains Aldridge’s reviews of ''Genius and Lust'' ([[76.12]]), ''The Long Patrol'' ([[71.29]]), and ''Harlot’s Ghost'' ([[91.26]]). | * {{Anchor|Aldridge (1992)}}{{cite book |last=Aldridge |first=John W. |date=1992 |title=Classics and Contemporaries |url= |location=Columbia |publisher=University of Missouri Press |pages=54–58 |isbn= |author-link=w:John W. Aldridge }} Contains Aldridge’s reviews of ''Genius and Lust'' ([[76.12]]), ''The Long Patrol'' ([[71.29]]), and ''Harlot’s Ghost'' ([[91.26]]). | ||
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* {{Anchor|Bloom (1986)}}{{cite book |editor-last=Bloom |editor-first=Harold |date=1986 |title=Norman Mailer: Modern Critical Views |url= |location=New York |publisher=Chelsea House |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} Sixteen reviews and essays covering Mailer’s major works and emphasizing the influence of Hemingway, with Bloom’s brief introduction. | * {{Anchor|Bloom (1986)}}{{cite book |editor-last=Bloom |editor-first=Harold |date=1986 |title=Norman Mailer: Modern Critical Views |url= |location=New York |publisher=Chelsea House |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} Sixteen reviews and essays covering Mailer’s major works and emphasizing the influence of Hemingway, with Bloom’s brief introduction. | ||
* {{Anchor|Bloom (2003)}}{{cite book |editor-last=Bloom |editor-first=Harold |editor-mask=1 |date=2003 |title=Norman Mailer: Critical Views |url= |location=Philadelphia |publisher=Chelsea House |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} Thirteen reviews and essays focusing on Mailer’s later works. | * {{Anchor|Bloom (2003)}}{{cite book |editor-last=Bloom |editor-first=Harold |editor-mask=1 |date=2003 |title=Norman Mailer: Critical Views |url= |location=Philadelphia |publisher=Chelsea House |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} Thirteen reviews and essays focusing on Mailer’s later works. | ||
* {{Anchor|Bozung (2017)}}{{cite book |last=Bozung |first=Justin |date=2017 |title=The Cinema of Norman Mailer: Film Is | * {{Anchor|Bozung (2017)}}{{cite book |last=Bozung |first=Justin |date=2017 |title=The Cinema of Norman Mailer: Film Is Like Death |url= |location=New York |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |page= |isbn= |author-link=Justin Bozung }} A collection of mixed contributions: essays and memoirs from critics, collaborators, and Mailer himself ([[67.21]] and [[71.25]]), some reprinted, but mostly original texts including many stills from Mailer’s films. | ||
* {{Anchor|Booth (1988)}}{{cite book |last=Booth |first=Wayne |date=1988 |title=The Company We Keep: An Ethics of Fiction |url=https://archive.org/details/companywekeepeth0000boot |location=Berkeley and Los Angeles |publisher=University of California Press |page=207–210, 327–336 |isbn= |author-link= }} Useful to gauge how Mailer’s public image has alienated an important critic. | * {{Anchor|Booth (1988)}}{{cite book |last=Booth |first=Wayne |date=1988 |title=The Company We Keep: An Ethics of Fiction |url=https://archive.org/details/companywekeepeth0000boot |location=Berkeley and Los Angeles |publisher=University of California Press |page=207–210, 327–336 |isbn= |author-link= }} Useful to gauge how Mailer’s public image has alienated an important critic. | ||
* {{Anchor|Braudy (1991)}}{{cite book |last=Braudy |first=Leo |date=1991 |chapter=''Maidstone: A Mystery'' by Norman Mailer |title=Native Informant: Essays on Film, Fiction and Popular Culture |url=https://archive.org/details/nativeinformante00braurich |location=New York |publisher=Oxford |pages=60–63, 145–151 |isbn= |author-link= }} Rpt: [[#Adams (1974)|Adams (1974)]]. Informed comment on Mailer’s film and the Mailer-Pynchon dichotomy. | * {{Anchor|Braudy (1991)}}{{cite book |last=Braudy |first=Leo |date=1991 |chapter=''Maidstone: A Mystery'' by Norman Mailer |title=Native Informant: Essays on Film, Fiction and Popular Culture |url=https://archive.org/details/nativeinformante00braurich |location=New York |publisher=Oxford |pages=60–63, 145–151 |isbn= |author-link= }} Rpt: [[#Adams (1974)|Adams (1974)]]. Informed comment on Mailer’s film and the Mailer-Pynchon dichotomy. | ||
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* {{Anchor|Busch (1986)}}{{cite book |last=Busch |first=Frederick |date=1986 |chapter=The Whale as Shaggy Dog |title=When People Publish: Essays on Writers and Writing |url= |location=Iowa City |publisher=Iowa University Press |pages=65–82 |isbn= |author-link= }} Argues persuasively for the influence of ''Moby-Dick'' on “The Man Who Studied Yoga” ([[56.25]]). See [[51.2]]. | * {{Anchor|Busch (1986)}}{{cite book |last=Busch |first=Frederick |date=1986 |chapter=The Whale as Shaggy Dog |title=When People Publish: Essays on Writers and Writing |url= |location=Iowa City |publisher=Iowa University Press |pages=65–82 |isbn= |author-link= }} Argues persuasively for the influence of ''Moby-Dick'' on “The Man Who Studied Yoga” ([[56.25]]). See [[51.2]]. | ||
=== | ===C–G=== | ||
* {{Anchor|Cappell (2016)}}{{cite journal |last1=Cappell |first1=Ezra |date=2016 |title=Hemingway’s Jewish Progeny |url= |journal=Mailer Review |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=208–228 |doi= |access-date= }} | * {{Anchor|Cappell (2016)}}{{cite journal |last1=Cappell |first1=Ezra |date=2016 |title=Hemingway’s Jewish Progeny |url= |journal=Mailer Review |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=208–228 |doi= |access-date= }} | ||
* {{Anchor|Capote (1985)}}{{cite book |last=Capote |first=Truman |date=1985 |title=Conversations with Capote |url=https://archive.org/details/conversationswit00grob |editor-last=Grobel |editor-first=Lawrence |location=New York |publisher=New American Library |pages=112–116, passim |isbn= |author-link= }} Capote criticizes ''The Executioner’s Song'' ([[79.14]]). | * {{Anchor|Capote (1985)}}{{cite book |last=Capote |first=Truman |date=1985 |title=Conversations with Capote |url=https://archive.org/details/conversationswit00grob |editor-last=Grobel |editor-first=Lawrence |location=New York |publisher=New American Library |pages=112–116, passim |isbn= |author-link= }} Capote criticizes ''The Executioner’s Song'' ([[79.14]]). | ||
* {{Anchor|Foster (1968)}}{{cite book |last=Foster |first=Richard Jackson |date=1968 |title=Norman Mailer |url=https://archive.org/details/normanmailer00fost |location=Minneapolis |publisher=U of Minnesota P |volume=73 |series=University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers |ref=harv}} Rpt: [[#Lucid (1971)|Lucid (1971)]]; partial in [[#Bloom (1986)|Bloom (1986)]]. This monograph, one of the first extended treatments of Mailer’s work, is still one of the best. Excellent on Mailer’s urgent, “forcing style.” | * {{Anchor|Foster (1968)}}{{cite book |last=Foster |first=Richard Jackson |date=1968 |title=Norman Mailer |url=https://archive.org/details/normanmailer00fost |location=Minneapolis |publisher=U of Minnesota P |volume=73 |series=University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers |ref=harv}} Rpt: [[#Lucid (1971)|Lucid (1971)]]; partial in [[#Bloom (1986)|Bloom (1986)]]. This monograph, one of the first extended treatments of Mailer’s work, is still one of the best. Excellent on Mailer’s urgent, “forcing style.” | ||
* {{Anchor|Glenday (1995)}}{{cite book |last=Glenday |first=Michael |date=1995 |title=Norman Mailer |url= |location=London |publisher=Macmillan |author-link= |ref=harv}} Examines Mailer’s novels in a socio-political context. Contains one of the finest discussions of ''Why Are We in Vietnam'' ([[67.15]]), which he deftly relates to the issues of the day. | * {{Anchor|Glenday (1995)}}{{cite book |last=Glenday |first=Michael |date=1995 |title=Norman Mailer |url= |location=London |publisher=Macmillan |author-link= |ref=harv}} Examines Mailer’s novels in a socio-political context. Contains one of the finest discussions of ''Why Are We in Vietnam'' ([[67.15]]), which he deftly relates to the issues of the day. | ||
* {{Anchor|Gutman (1975)}}{{cite book |last=Gutman |first=Stanley T. |date=1975 |title=Mankind in Barbary: The Individual and Society in the Novels of Norman Mailer |url=https://archive.org/details/mankindinbarbary0000gutm |location=Hanover, NH |publisher=The University Press of New England |author-link= |ref=harv }} | |||
===H=== | ===H=== | ||
* {{Anchor|Handin (1978)}}{{cite book |last=Hendin |first=Josephine |date=1978 |chapter=American Rebels are Men of Action |title=Vulnerable People: A View of American Fiction Since 1945 |url=https://archive.org/details/vulnerablepeople00hend |location=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=117–144 |isbn= |author-link= }} Feminist critique focusing on the “fixed principles” of Mailer’s work: “anger and the adversary relation.” | |||
* {{Anchor|Hersey (1980)}}{{cite journal |last=Hersey |first=John |date=1980 |title=The Legend on the License |url= |journal=Yale Review |volume=70 |issue=October |pages=1–25 |access-date= }} Attack on the veracity of ''The Executioner’s Song'' ([[79.14]]). | |||
* {{Anchor|Hesla (1968)}}{{cite book |last=Hesla |first=David |date=1968 |chapter=The Two Roles of Norman Mailer |title=Adversity and Grace: Studies in Recent American Literature |editor-last=Scott |editor-first=Nathan, Jr. |url=https://archive.org/details/adversitygracest0004unse |location=Chicago |publisher=University of Chicago Press |pages=211–238 |isbn= |author-link= }} Argues that Mailer fails as a thinker and ignores earlier intellectual leaders. | |||
* {{Anchor|Hicks (1970)}}{{cite book |last=Hicks |first=Granville |date=1970 |title=Literary Horizons: A Quarter Century of American Fiction |url=https://archive.org/details/literaryhorizons00hick |location=New York |publisher=New York University Press |pages=273–290 |isbn= |author-link=w:Granville Hicks }} Reviews of four Mailer narratives by ''Saturday Review''’s longtime literary reviewer and Mailer misconstruer. | |||
* {{Anchor|Hollowell (1977)}}{{cite book |last=Hollowell |first=John |date=1977 |chapter=Mailer’s Vision: History as a Novel, The Novel as History |title=Fact and Fiction: The New Journalism and the Nonfiction Novel |url=https://archive.org/details/factfiction00john |location=Chapel Hill |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |pages=87–125 |isbn= |author-link= }} First major appraisal of Mailer as a New Journalist, with excellent bibliography. | |||
* {{Anchor|Horn (1982)}}{{cite journal |last=Horn |first=Bernard |date=1982 |title=[[Ahab and Ishmael at War: The Presence of Moby-Dick in The Naked and the Dead|Ahab and Ishmael at War: The Presence of ''Moby-Dick'' in ''The Naked and the Dead'']] |url= |journal=American Quarterly |volume=34 |issue=fall |pages=379–385 |access-date= }} Definitive. Rpt: [[The Mailer Review, Volume 10, 2016|''Mailer Review'' (2016)]], 379–85. See [[51.2]]. | |||
===J–K=== | ===J–K=== | ||
* {{Anchor|Jameson (1972)}}{{cite journal |last=Jameson |first=Fredric R. |date=1972 |title=The Great American Hunter, or Ideological Content in the Novel |url= |journal=College English |volume=34 |issue=November |pages=180–199 |access-date= |author-link=w:Fredric Jameson }} Marxist critique which argues that Mailer is dependent on the very diseases and poisons of technology that he condemns. | |||
* {{Anchor|Johnson (1982)}}{{cite book |last=Johnson |first=Diane |date=1982 |chapter=Death for Sale: Norman Mailer on Gary Gilmore |title=Terrorists and Novelists |url=https://archive.org/details/terroristsnoveli00john |location=New York |publisher=Knopf |pages=87–96 |isbn= |author-link= }} One of the few commentators to question the truthfulness of ''The Executioner’s Song'' ([[79.14]]). | |||
* {{Anchor|Karl (1983)}}{{cite book |last=Karl |first=Frederick R. |date=1983 |title=American Fictions, 1940-1980 |url=https://archive.org/details/americanfictions00karl |location=New York |publisher=Harper and Row |pages=12–14, 579–582 |isbn= |author-link=w:Frederick Karl }} Extravagant praise for Why Are We in Vietnam? (67.15) and delineation of Mailer’s concern for a schizophrenic America. | |||
* {{Anchor|Kaufmann (2014)}}{{cite book |last=Kaufmann |first=Donald L. |date=2014 |title=Norman Mailer: Legacy and Literary Americana |url= |location=Saarbruken, Germany |publisher=Scholar's Press |pages= |isbn= |author-link=Donald L. Kaufmann }} | |||
* {{Anchor|Kaufmann (1969)}}{{cite book |last=Kaufmann |first=Donald L. |authormask=1 |date=1969 |title=Norman Mailer: The Countdown (The First Twenty Years) |url=https://archive.org/details/normanmailercoun00dona |location=Carbondale |publisher=Southern Illinois University Press |pages= |isbn= |author-link= }} Pioneering discussion of the beast-seer conflict in the early work which overlooks Mailer’s political interests. | |||
* {{Anchor|Kellman (1983)}}{{cite journal |last=Kellman |first=Steven G. |date=1983 |title=Mailer’s Strains of Fact |url= |journal=Southwest Review |volume=68 |issue=spring |pages=1226–133 |access-date= }} Richly allusive generic discussion of ''The Executioner’s Song'' ([[79.14]]). | |||
* {{Anchor|Kernan (1982)}}{{cite book |last=Kernan |first=Alvin B. |date=1982 |chapter=The Taking of the Moon: The Struggle of the Poetic and Scientific Myth in Norman Mailer’s ''Of a Fire on the Moon'' |title=The Imaginary Library: An Essay on Literature and Society |url=https://archive.org/details/imaginarylibrary00kern |location=Princeton |publisher=Princeton University Press |pages=130–161 |isbn= |author-link= }} Rpt: [[#Bloom (1986)|Bloom (1986)]]. Perhaps the best thing written on Mailer’s narrative of the Apollo 11 mission. | |||
* {{Anchor|Kuberski (1989)}}{{cite journal |last=Kuberski |first=Philip |date=1989 |title=The Metaphysics of Postmodern Death: Mailer’s ''Ancient Evenings'' and Merrill’s ''The Changing Light at Sandover'' |url= |journal=English Literary History |volume=56 |issue=spring |pages=229–254 |access-date= }} Mailer and Merrill against Cartesian mechanism and postmodern despair. | |||
===L=== | ===L=== | ||
* {{Anchor|Leeds (2002)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=2002 |title=The Enduring Vision of Norman Mailer |url= |location=Bainbridge Island, Wash. |publisher=Pleasure Boat Studio |ref=harv }} Examination of Mailer’s later works, including an interview with Mailer, and a deft descriptive chapter, “The Critical Climate: Books on Mailer.” | * {{Anchor|Landow (1986)}}{{cite book |last=Landow |first=George P. |date=1986 |title=Elegant Jeremiahs: The Sage from Caryle to Mailer |url= |location=Ithaca, NY |publisher=Cornell University Press |pages=101–104, 128–129, 144–150 |isbn= |author-link= }} Careful tracing of the pattern of definition, revilement, warning and visionary promise in Mailer, Joan Didion, Tom Wolfe and earlier writers such as John Ruskin and Henry David Thoreau. | ||
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1969)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=1969 |title=[[The Structured Vision of Norman Mailer]] |url= |location=New York |publisher=NYU Press |ref=harv }} First major study of Mailer’s work; valuable for its analysis of ''An American Dream'' ([[65.7]]), and consideration of ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]) and ''Deaths for the Ladies (and Other Disasters)'' ([[62.3]]). | * {{Anchor|Langbaum (1970)}}{{cite book |last=Langbaum |first=Robert |date=1970 |chapter=Mailer's New Style |title=The Modern Spirit: Essays on the Continuity of Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Literature |url=https://archive.org/details/modernspiritessa00lang |location=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=147–163 |author-link= }} Rpt: [[#Bloom (1986)|Bloom (1986)]]. Important essay on the evolution of Mailer’s “hallucinated realism.” | ||
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1992)}}{{cite journal |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=1992 |title=Boxing as a Moral Paradigm in the Works of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=The New Review |volume=1 |issue=September/October |pages=12–16 |access-date= }} The most complete discussion of the topic. | |||
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1991)}}{{cite journal |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |authormask=1 |date=1991 |title=Mailer and Marilyn: Prisoners of Sex |url= |journal=North Dakota Quarterly |volume= |issue=winter |pages=110–117 |access-date= }} “The coherence of Mailer’s vision of [Marilyn] Monroe, of women, and of heterosexual love.” | |||
* {{Anchor|Leeds (2002)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |authormask=1 |date=2002 |title=The Enduring Vision of Norman Mailer |url= |location=Bainbridge Island, Wash. |publisher=Pleasure Boat Studio |ref=harv }} Examination of Mailer’s later works, including an interview with Mailer, and a deft descriptive chapter, “The Critical Climate: Books on Mailer.” | |||
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1969)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |date=1969 |authormask=1 |title=[[The Structured Vision of Norman Mailer]] |url= |location=New York |publisher=NYU Press |ref=harv }} First major study of Mailer’s work; valuable for its analysis of ''An American Dream'' ([[65.7]]), and consideration of ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]) and ''Deaths for the Ladies (and Other Disasters)'' ([[62.3]]). | |||
* {{Anchor|Leeds (1994)}}{{cite book |last=Leeds |first=Barry H. |authormask=1 |chapter=Tough Guy Goes Hollywood: Mailer and the Movies |date=1994 |title=Take Two: Adapting the Contemporary American Novel to Film |editor-last=Lupack |editor-first=Barbara Tepa |url= |location=Bowling Green, OH |publisher=Popular Press |pages=154–168 |access-date= }} Most nuanced discussion of the adaptation of ''Tough Guys Don’t Dance'' ([[84.17]]) to the screen. | |||
* {{Anchor|Lehan (1973)}}{{cite book |last=Lehan |first=Richard |date=1973 |title=A Dangerous Crossing: French Literary Existentialism and the Modern American Novel |url=https://archive.org/details/dangerouscrossin00rich |location=Carbondale |publisher=Southern Illinois University Press |pages=81–95 |isbn= |author-link= }} Mailer’s cosmology as an existential recreation. | * {{Anchor|Lehan (1973)}}{{cite book |last=Lehan |first=Richard |date=1973 |title=A Dangerous Crossing: French Literary Existentialism and the Modern American Novel |url=https://archive.org/details/dangerouscrossin00rich |location=Carbondale |publisher=Southern Illinois University Press |pages=81–95 |isbn= |author-link= }} Mailer’s cosmology as an existential recreation. | ||
* {{Anchor|Leigh (1990a)}}{{cite journal |last=Leigh |first=Nigel |date=1990 |title=Getting It Wrong: The Cinema of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=Journal of American Studies |volume=24 |issue=3 |pages=399–413 |access-date= }} Comment on Mailer’s films and those made from his novels. | * {{Anchor|Leigh (1990a)}}{{cite journal |last=Leigh |first=Nigel |date=1990 |title=Getting It Wrong: The Cinema of Norman Mailer |url= |journal=Journal of American Studies |volume=24 |issue=3 |pages=399–413 |access-date= }} Comment on Mailer’s films and those made from his novels. | ||
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* {{Anchor|Muste (1971)}}{{cite journal |last=Muste |first=John M. |date=1971 |title=Norman Mailer and John Dos Passos: The Question of Influence |url= |journal=Modern Fiction Studies |volume=17 |issue=autumn |pages=361–374 |access-date= }} Raises serious doubts about the specific influence of John Dos Passos’s ''U.S.A.'' on ''The Naked and the Dead'' ([[48.2]]). | * {{Anchor|Muste (1971)}}{{cite journal |last=Muste |first=John M. |date=1971 |title=Norman Mailer and John Dos Passos: The Question of Influence |url= |journal=Modern Fiction Studies |volume=17 |issue=autumn |pages=361–374 |access-date= }} Raises serious doubts about the specific influence of John Dos Passos’s ''U.S.A.'' on ''The Naked and the Dead'' ([[48.2]]). | ||
=== | ===N–O=== | ||
* {{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]]). | * {{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]]. | * {{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]]. | ||
* {{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|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|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. | * {{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. | ||
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* {{Anchor|Wilson (2008)}}{{cite book |last=Wilson |first=Andrew |date=2008 |title=Norman Mailer: An American Aesthetic |url= |location=Oxford, England |publisher=Peter Lang |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} | * {{Anchor|Wilson (2008)}}{{cite book |last=Wilson |first=Andrew |date=2008 |title=Norman Mailer: An American Aesthetic |url= |location=Oxford, England |publisher=Peter Lang |page= |isbn= |author-link= }} | ||
* {{Anchor|Zavarzadeh (1976)}}{{cite book |last=Zavarzadeh |first=Mas'ud |date=1976 |title=The Mythopoeic Reality: The Postwar American Nonfiction Novel |url=https://archive.org/details/mythopoeicrealit0000zava |location=Urbana |publisher=University of Illinois Press |pages=153–176 and passim |isbn= |author-link= }} Attempts to prove, unconvincingly, that ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]) has a “zero degree of interpretation” of reality. | * {{Anchor|Zavarzadeh (1976)}}{{cite book |last=Zavarzadeh |first=Mas'ud |date=1976 |title=The Mythopoeic Reality: The Postwar American Nonfiction Novel |url=https://archive.org/details/mythopoeicrealit0000zava |location=Urbana |publisher=University of Illinois Press |pages=153–176 and passim |isbn= |author-link= }} Attempts to prove, unconvincingly, that ''The Armies of the Night'' ([[68.8]]) has a “zero degree of interpretation” of reality. | ||
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