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

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===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===