World Elsewhere (Revised)

(Author) (Contribution by)
Available
Product Details
Price
$24.95
Publisher
University of Wisconsin Press
Publish Date
Pages
272
Dimensions
5.42 X 8.62 X 0.67 inches | 0.73 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780299099343
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Richard Poirier (1925-2009) was an American literary critic. He co-founded the Library of America, and served as chairman of its board. He was the Marius Bewley Professor of American and English Literature at Rutgers University and the editor of Raritan, a literary quarterly, and of Partisan Review.
Reviews
"Mr. Poirier has written a brilliant book. . . . It is continuously exciting, filled with . . . imaginative analyses of the stylistic problems faced by the seminal American writers . . . [and] acute analyses of the incessant war between the artist and American society."--American Quarterly


"Poirier makes a radical distinction between 'works that create through language an essentially imaginative environment for the hero and works that mirror an environment already accredited by history and society.' Although he discusses works of the latter kind for sake of contrast . . . his book principally studies authors who attempt the former. These authors seek to build 'a world elsewhere.' They try 'temporarily to free the here . . . from systems, ' to create for him 'an environment of freedom, ' the freedom being 'that reality which the consciousness creates for itself, ' which the author creates 'throught style.' [Poirier's book] is rich in penetrating analyses and illuminating insights."--Southwest Review

". . . Richard Poirier brings to this study of exemplary American novelists some finely-honed equipment for textual analysis. . . . For him, 'the most interesting American books are an image of the creation of American itself, of the effort, in the words of Emerson's Orphic poet, to "Build therefore your own world".' To the metaphor of building Poirier adds that of an expansion of consciousness, the creation of a visionary world unfettered by environment, by the 'real' demands of economics, society, history or biology."--The New Republic