Posted on 02/06/2002 4:35:19 AM PST by Liz
London (Reuters) American writer Norman Mailer has criticized the ``patriotic fever'' gripping the United States following the Sept. 11 attacks.
``What happened on Sept. 11 was horrific, but this patriotic fever can go too far,'' Britain's Daily Telegraph quoted Mailer, 79, as saying Wednesday.
``America has an almost obscene infatuation with itself. Has there ever been a big powerful country that is as patriotic as America?'' Mailer asked in an interview.
``You'd really think we were some poor little republic, and that if one person lost his religion for one hour, the whole thing would crumble. America is the real religion in this country.''
Mailer, renowned for his macho image and stabbing the second of his six wives 40 years ago, said America's right wing had benefited from the attacks on Sept. 11.
``The right wing benefited so much from Sept. 11 that, if I were still a conspiratorialist, I would believe they'd done it,'' he said.
Mailer is widely recognized as pioneering the genre known as New Journalism, where writers such as Tom Wolfe, Hunter S. Thompson and Joan Didion blurred the distinction between fact and fiction and peppered prose with their own opinions.
Mailer's best known works include ``The Executioner's Song'' and ``The Armies of the Night.''
Only a lib could pioneer New Journalism. When they don't like the facts, they ignor them and make up the news. Actually, what he supposedly pioneered is nothing new. It's called propaganda.
Mailer was inducted into the army in March 1944, less than a year after graduating with honors from Harvard with a B.S. in engineering. His experience in the army as a surveyor in the field artillery, an intelligence clerk in the cavalry and a rifleman with a reconnaissance platoon in the Philippine mountains, gave him the idea for a novel about World War II. Shortly after his discharge he began writing The Naked and the Dead which was published in 1948. The novel, a critical and commercial success, was at the top of the New York Times best-seller list for eleven weeks, and brought Mailer immediate recognition as one of America's most promising writers. The Naked and the Dead remains one of the classic novels of World War II.
Mailer's next two novels Barbary Shore (1951) and The Deer Park (1955), which was rejected by six publishers before being accepted, were not well received, and he turned his literary energies to journalism. He helped found The Village Voice in 1954 and wrote a weekly column for it for a short time. In 1959, Mailer published Advertisements for Myself, a collection of essays, letters and fictions on the subjects of politics, sex, drugs, his own writing, and the works of others. It received considerable attention as it contained autobiographical passages of the pressures of success, money, liquor, and the literary marketplace on the serious American writer.
Mailer returned to the novel with the publishing of An American Dream (1965), and Why Are We in Vietnam? (1967), which was nominated for a National Book Award. During the 60s he also developed a hybrid literary form, combining fiction and nonfiction narrative in The Armies of the Night (1968) which won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award and brought Mailer both popular and critical acclaim, and Miami and the Siege of Chicago (I 968), which won a National Book Award for nonfiction. In The Armies of the Night he used the techniques of a novel to explore an October 1967 anti-Vietnam march on the Pentagon, a protest during which he was arrested.
During the next ten years, Mailer continued to write prolifically, publishing a wide range of books including Of a Fire on the Moon (1971), a book on the Apollo II moon landing; The Prisoner of Sex (I 971), an essay in response to the women's liberation movement; Marilyn (1973), a novel biography of Marilyn Monroe; The Fight (1976), a book-length description of the Muhammad Ali-George Foreman fight in Zaire, Africa, among others. His body of work displays a wide scope, a willingness to explore controversial themes and to experiment with different forms and styles.
Mailer returned to a book of the same intense proportions as The Naked and the Dead with The Executioner's Song (I 979), a nonfiction novel on the life and execution of convicted murderer Gary Gilmore. The Executioner's Song won Mailer his second Pulitzer Prize and it also was nominated for the American Book Award and National Book Critics Circle Award. All reviews lauded Mailer's artistry and agreed that The Executioner's Song was a substantial book produced by a literary master.
Long promising an epic multi-volume novel of major importance, Mailer published Ancient Evenings, a work of mythic themes, in 1983. Billed as the first of a two-to-four part cycle, Ancient Evenings, an ambitious and daring work of fiction, is set in Egypt during the nineteenth and twentieth dynasties (1290-1100 B.C.).
In addition to his books, Mailer also has written, produced, directed and acted in several films. Wild 90 (1967), which Mailer produced and directed was an adaptation of his book The Deer Park. Despite terrible reviews, it ran for four months at New York's Theatre de Lys. His second film, Beyond the Law (1968) received positive reviews but did not draw audiences, and his third film, Maidstone (I 971), based on The Armies of the Night received mixed reviews. He returned to the cinema to write a screenplay for his murder mystery novel of the same name, Tough Guys Don't Dance and to direct it himself . This film was well received at the 1987 Cannes film festival. Mailer also wrote the script for the film version of The Executioner's Song and received an Emmy nomination for best adaptation.
Mailer's most recent work is Harlot's Ghost, which was published in the fall of 1991. At 1,310 pages, it is a work of epic proportion and ambition about the people and the plottings of the C.I.A. during the crucial decades of the "American Century."
SELECTED FICTION
THE NAKED AND THE DEAD. New York: Rinehart, 1948.
BARBARY SHORE. New York: Rinehart, 1951.
THE DEER PARK. New York: Putnam's, 1955.
AN AMERICAN DREAM. New York: Dial, 1965.
THE SHORT FICTION OF NORMAN MAILER. New York: Dell, 1967.
WHY ARE WE IN VIETNAM? New York: Putnam's, 1967.
THE EXECUTIONER'S SONG. Boston: Little, Brown, 1979.
ANCIENT EVENINGS. Boston: Little, Brown, 1983.
TOUGH GUYS DON'T DANCE. New York: Random House, 1984.
HARLOT'S GHOST. New York: Random House, 1991.
SELECTED NONFICTION AND COLLECTIONS
THE WHITE NEGRO. San Francisco: City Lights, 1957.
ADVERTISEMENTS FOR MYSELF New York: Putnarn's, 1959.
CANNIBALS AND CHRISTIANS. New York: Dial, 1966.
THE ARMIES OF THE NIGHT. New York: New American Library, 1968.
MIAMI AND THE SIEGE OF CHICAGO. New York: New American Library, 1968.
OF A FIRE ON THE MOON. Boston: Little, Brown, 1970.
THE PRISONER OF SEX. Boston: Little, Brown, 1971.
BIOGRAPHY [IN NOVEL FORM]
MARILYN. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1973.
BIOGRAPHY
MAILER: A BIOGRAPHY by Hilary Mills. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1984.
CRITICISM
NORMAN MAILER by Richard Poirier. New York: Viking, 1972.
CRITICAL ESSAYS ON NORMAN MAILER compiled and introduced by J. Michael Lennon. Boston: G. K. Hall & Co., 1986.
RADICAL FICTIONS AND THE NOVELS OF NORMAN MAILER by Nigel Leigh. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1990.
PROFILES/INTERVIEWS
PONTIFICATIONS. Boston: Little, Brown, 1982.
CONVERSATIONS WITH NORMAN MAILER edited by J. Michael Lennon. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 1988.
THE OLD MAN AND THE NOVEL by Scott Spencer. In New York Times Magazine, September 22, 199 1, p. 28.
SELECTED READINGS ON TAPE AND VIDEOCASSETTE
ANCIENT EVENINGS. Sound cassettes (2). New York: Caedmon, 1983.
THE LANGUAGE OF MEN. New Rochelle, NY. Spoken Arts, Inc., 1983.
THE NAKED AND THE DEAD. Sound cassette. New York: Caedmon, 1983.
NORMAN MAILER: THE SANCTION TO WRITE. [A film by Jeffrey Van Davis] Videocassette. Champaign, IL: Picture Start, 1983.
THE EXECUTIONER'S SONG. Sound cassettes (2). Los Angeles: Audio Renaissance Tapes, 1990.
"Ron Stanger's first impression was how many people were in the room. God, the number of spectators. Executions must be a spectator sport. It really hit him even before his first look at Gary, and then he was thankful the hood was not on yet. That was a relief. Gilmore was still a human being, not a hooded, grotesque thing, and Ron realized how he had been preparing himself for the shock of seeing Gary with his face concealed in a black bag. But, no, there was Gary staring at the crowd with an odd humor in his face. Stanger knew what he was thinking. 'Anybody who knows somebody is going to get an invite to the turkey shoot."' - from The Executioner's Song |
"One of the oldest devices of the novelist--some would call it a vice--is to bring his narrative (after many an excursion) to a pitch of excitement where the reader no matter how cultivated is reduced to a beast who can pant no faster than to ask, 'And then what? Then what happens?' At which point the novelist, consummate cruel lover, introduces a digression, aware that delay at this point helps to deepen the addiction of his audience. This, of course, was Victorian practice. Modem audiences, accustomed to superhighways, put aside their reading at the first annoyance and turn to the television set. So a modem novelist must apologize, even apologize profusely, for daring to leave his narrative, he must in fact absolve himself of the charge of employing a device, he must plead necessity." - from The Armies of the Night |
"But this frustration was replaced by another. What if he had been present, had directed the climactic day himself What really would it have meant? The Japanese had been worn down to the point where any concerted tactic no matter how rudimentary would have been enough to collapse their lines. It was impossible to shake the idea that anyone could have won this campaign, and it had consisted of only patience and sandpaper. For a moment he almost admitted that he had had very little or perhaps nothing at all to do with this victory, or indeed any victory--it had been accomplished by a random play of vulgar good luck larded into a causal net of factors too large, too vague, for him to comprehend. He allowed himself this thought, brought it almost to the point of words and then forced it back. But it caused him a deep depression."- from The Naked and the Dead |
"He did not, said Kittredge. He had died in the hospital. That may have been his end, but since I had thought of him as near to dead for many years, I pondered his slow extinction. Had his soul died years before his heart and liver and lungs? I hoped not. He had enjoyed so much. Espionage had been his life, and infidelity as well; he had loved them both. Why not? The spy, like the illicit lover, must be capable of existing in two places at once. Even as an actor's role cannot offer its reality until it is played, so does a lie enter existence by being lived." - from Harlot's Ghost |
Yes! With a Mossad agent in the pilot's seat and a VRWC member as the co-pilot.
Yeah. And Norm doffed his tinfoil hat and said " Geez, just like in the movies." LOL
I seriously doubt whether NM's observations created even a ripple on the placid Thames.....
Screwed is right. Oops. My mistake. OK. NM's thinking is skewed and screwed.
'Fuzzy Journalism', how 'progressive'.
Dishonest journalism is more like it. I want the facts. Just the facts.
I don't want to be proselytized by these lefties. I'll make up my own mind.
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