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Alfred Kazin
  • 4 книги
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Alfred Kazin — новинки

  • Writing Was Everything (Paper) Alfred Kazin
    ISBN: 9780674962385
    Год издания: 1999
    Язык: Английский
    Writing Was Everything (Paper)
  • God and the American Writer Alfred Kazin
    ISBN: 0679733418
    Год издания: 1998
    Язык: Английский

    God and the American Writer does more to illuminate the fundamental purposes and motivations of our greatest writers from Hawthorne to Faulkner than any study I have read in the past fifty-five years--that is, since the same author's On Native Grounds. --Louis S. Auchincloss This is the culminating work of the finest living critic of American literature. Alfred Kazin brings a lifetime of thought and reading to the triumphant elucidation of his fascinating and slippery subjects: what the meaning of God has been for American writers, and how those writers, from the New England Calvinists to William Faulkner, have expressed it. In a…

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  • Writing was Everything Alfred Kazin
    ISBN: 9780674962378
    Год издания: 1995
    Язык: Английский
    Writing was Everything
  • A Walker in the City Alfred Kazin
    ISBN: 978-0156941761
    Год издания: 1969
    Издательство: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich
    In A Walker in the City, Alfred Kazin recalls his childhood in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn with such tactile specificity that readers, too, will smell "that good and deep odor of lox, of salami, of herrings and half-sour pickles" that emanated from the neighborhood pushcarts. His story is set in the working-class Jewish community of New York City in the decade preceding the Great Depression, but this classic memoir of the first-generation American experience resonates universally. Kazin depicts his younger self as a smart, unhappy kid who dreamed of escape from a confining local landscape. He found in books the road map to a freer territory. In Kazin's case, this was "the city" ("everything just out of Brownsville") whose glamorous institutions--the New York Public Library, the Metropolitan Museum, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden--spoke of an American past and an intellectual community that this son of eastern European immigrants was determined to make his own. (And he did, with his pioneering 1942 critical work, On Native Grounds, published when he was just 27.) Yet Kazin came to understand that the roots he had been so anxious to tear up were the source of his deepest identity. His loving portrait of his past acknowledges the crucial importance of belonging, even as it affirms the compelling necessity of escape. What could be more American? --Wendy Smith