Tilting at Mortality: Narrative Strategies in Joseph Heller's FictionWayne State University Press, 2000 - 330 Seiten This work considers Joseph Heller's career and examines each of his novels, including Closing Time. It pursues two complementary tracks: first it explores the evolution of Heller's treatment of human morality; and second, it delineates Heller's artistic developments as a novelist. |
Inhalt
PREFACE | 11 |
UNCERTAIN FIRST STEPS | 21 |
LOCATING THE WOUND TELLING THE TALE | 40 |
3 | 85 |
CLOSURE | 113 |
4 | 119 |
POSSIBILITY AND CONSTRAINT | 146 |
6 | 179 |
ANALOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS AND COMPLEMENTARY | 186 |
7 | 208 |
CONTEXT | 241 |
AFTERWORD | 252 |
JOSEPH HELLERS SCHEMATIC OUTLINE FOR CATCH22 | 263 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 308 |
324 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Tilting at Mortality: Narrative Strategies in Joseph Heller's Fiction David M. Craig Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1997 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abigail Abishag Absalom allusions American Aristotle artist authorial audience Avignon Bathsheba become biblical Bologna bombing Brandeis University Brandeis University Library Cathcart chaplain chapter character child Closing comedy comic Coney Island consciousness Critical Essays Daneeka David Seed desire Doc Daneeka Dreedle emotional episode Essays on Joseph fear feel Gold Gold's Happened Heller's fiction Heller's novels human humor Hungry Joe identity imagination innocence James Nagel Jewish experience Jews joke Joseph Heller Joseph Heller's Kid Sampson killed Kilroy language Laughing live Luciana McWatt meaning Melissa memory Merrill Milo missions mortality myth narrator Nately Nately's Nately's whore never novelist Nurse Duckett Oedipus painting paradox Peckem Picture plot protagonist reader relationship Rembrandt Robert Merrill Ruas interview Sammy Singer sarian says scene sense Slocum Snowden's Snowden's death Socrates son's story talk tells tion turn Univ vision wants wife wound writing York Yossarian