Academic literature on the topic 'Nathan Roth'

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Journal articles on the topic "Nathan Roth"

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Ogden, Benjamin H. "Formal Antagonisms: How Philip Roth Writes Nathan Zuckerman." Studies in American Fiction 39, no. 1 (2012): 87–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/saf.2012.0002.

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Dewald, Paul A. "Nathan Roth, M.D.: “The Aim of Psychoanalytic Therapy”." American Journal of Psychotherapy 50, no. 4 (October 1996): 525–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.psychotherapy.1996.50.4.525.

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Kartiganer, Donald. "Ghost-Writing: Philip Roth's Portrait of the Artist." AJS Review 13, no. 1-2 (1988): 153–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0364009400002336.

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In writing a trilogy of novels on the life and times of Nathan Zuckerman, American Jewish Writer, Philip Roth has waded manfully into a tradition even more thickly and brilliantly populated than the one he selected as literary background for The Breast. If the grotesque metamorphosis of David Kepesh into a six–foot, one–hundred–and–fifty–pound female breast compels us to compare Roths novel with some of the great texts of Kafka and Gogol, in Zuckerman Bound Roth invokes the more formidable context of James, Proust, Joyce, Lawrence, Mann, and Gide (to mention only a few), several of whose artist–portraits are identified in the trilogy and all implied. Roth has said in an interview that the novelty of this particular portrait is that it describes the comedy that an artistic vocation can turn out to be in the U.S.A.1 The comedy pertains not only to the career of Zuckerman himself, a series of zany encounters with writers, readers, and critics, whose responses to one Zuckerman fiction become the action of the next, but also to Roths typical strategy of challenging and recreating any prior tradition or convention, however sacrosanct. The crux of Rothian comedy is to expose, embarrass, and ridicule, to break bonds and boundaries, pieties and platitudes.
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Glass, Loren. "Zuckerman/Roth: Literary Celebrity between Two Deaths." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 129, no. 2 (March 2014): 223–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2014.129.2.223.

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Philip Roth invented Nathan Zuckerman to manage the temporal dissonance between the gradual and frequently posthumous canonization associated with Roth's modernist forebears and the instantaneous and contemporaneous celebrity characterizing his own postmodern career. After the mass cultural renown precipitated by Portnoy's Complaint and the devastating attack on that text by Irving Howe, Roth decided to re-create his career on the model of his literary forebears—James, Flaubert, Proust, Malamud, Mann, and especially Kafka, who died young after having published little. The first Zuckerman trilogy and its epilogue absorb the charismatic powers of these ancestors, after which Roth kills his avatar in The Counterlife, catapulting him into a pseudo-posthumous Jamesian major phase. The entire Zuckerman cycle, then, is a unique but also historically symptomatic strategy for dealing with the problem of celebrity authorship under a postmodern dispensation.
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Berryman, Charles. "Philip Roth and Nathan Zuckerman: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Prometheus." Contemporary Literature 31, no. 2 (1990): 177. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1208585.

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Sýkora, Michal. "The Prague Orgy: The Life of Writers in a Totalitarian State According to Philip Roth." Humanities 8, no. 2 (April 7, 2019): 71. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/h8020071.

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This paper deals with the way Philip Roth depicted writers in Czechoslovakia in the 1970s in his novella The Prague Orgy, the final part of the Zuckerman Bound tetralogy. Researchers often read The Prague Orgy in the context of the entire tetralogy and accentuate the contact with Jewish topics. The primary focus of the paper is how Roth views Czech writers and their lives through the eyes of his long-term hero (and fictional alter-ego) Nathan Zuckerman and how he perceives life in a totalitarian state. The Prague Orgy is discussed as a somewhat abstract story about the writer’s freedom and responsibility of their work. There are three types of writers in The Prague Orgy: The émigré (Sisovsky), the dissenter (Bolotka), and the pro-regime (Novak). Each of them, in an interview with Roth’s hero, formulates his attitude to the regime. Zuckerman is fascinated by the life of opposition artists, their experience of freedom (realized in the private sphere), and the social response to their work. Although the reality of life in Czechoslovakia under communism is not the main topic of the novella, the paper concludes that the depiction of life of Czech underground intellectuals interested mostly in sex is in consonance with the picture of Czech dissent in official regime propaganda.
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Johnson, Curtis D. "Supply-side and Demand-side Revivalism?" Social Science History 19, no. 1 (1995): 1–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s014555320001720x.

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The revivalism connected with what we now call the Second Great Awakening was well established on the American landscape by the 1830s. Having observed the impact of camp meetings and itinerant preachers, particularly in the Far West, Alexis de Tocqueville noted that, “Here and there, in the midst of American Society, you meet with men, full of a fanatical and almost wild enthusiasm” (1847: 142). Yet Tocqueville's discomfort with frontier revivalism was hardly universal. By the late 1820s, many Americans recognized the recruiting success of western Baptists, Methodists, and Christians, and young men like Charles Finney modified their camp-meeting techniques for use in eastern churches. Although his methods shocked many hard-core Calvinists, Finney's New Measures soon overwhelmed the quiet, traditionalist revivalism of Nathaniel Taylor, Asahel Nettleton, and Lyman Beecher. As Finney and his associates gained wider acceptance throughout the nation, they also moved the Second Great Awakening from its formative stage, described by Nathan Hatch (1989), to a mainstream stage described by William McLoughlin (1978), Paul Johnson (1979), and numerous other historians (e.g., Ryan 1983, Roth 1987, C. Johnson 1989).
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Wirth-Nesher, Hana. "Cross Scripts: Inscribing Hebrew into Jewish American Literature." Journal of Jewish Languages 8, no. 1-2 (September 9, 2020): 90–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134638-bja10001.

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Abstract Most Jewish immigrants to America during the early 20th century arrived speaking Yiddish or Ladino and using Hebrew and Aramaic for liturgical purposes. When subsequent generations abandoned the first two languages, Hebrew and Aramaic were retained, used primarily for liturgy and rites of passage. Jewish American writers have often inserted Hebrew into their English texts by either reproducing the original alphabet or transliterating into Latin letters. This essay focuses on diverse strategies for representing liturgical Hebrew with an emphasis on the poetic, thematic, and sociolinguistic aspects of these expressions of both home and the foreign. Hebrew transliteration is discussed for its literary (rather than phonetic) rendering, for its multilingual creative contact with the other languages and cultures of each narrative. Among the authors whose works are discussed are Philip Roth, Michael Chabon, Nathan Englander, Joshua Cohen, Achy Obejas, and Gary Shteyngart.
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Sokoloff, Naomi. "Introduction: American Jewish Writing Today." AJS Review 30, no. 2 (October 27, 2006): 227–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0364009406000109.

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This is an exciting time for North American Jewish literature. In the past ten years, there has been an explosion of writing by new and established authors. In the field of fiction alone, the shelves have filled with titles by such fine talent as Pearl Abraham, Melvin Jules Bukiet, Michael Chabon, Nathan Englander, Myla Goldberg, Ehud Havatzelet, Dara Horn, Jonathan Safran Foer, Joan Leegant, Tova Mirvis, Jon Papernick, Jonathan Rosen, Aryeh Lev Stollman, and many others, as well as new works by veteran writers such as Allegra Goodman, Thane Rosenbaum, and Steve Stern. Add to these names the preeminent Cynthia Ozick, and don’t forget Philip Roth, whose productivity continues unabated and whose latest novels include some of his strongest work ever. A variety of striking themes has come to the fore in this new wave of literary creativity. Notable trends include an unprecedented attention to religion (especially Orthodox Jewish life); a fascination with women’s lives and with questions of gender and sexual orientation; a concern with the experiences of the second and succeeding generations of the Holocaust; a nostalgia for and rediscovery of the old country; a consideration of new Americans in the 1980s and 1990s; and a rethinking of what it means to be a Jew in Israel and in the Diaspora.
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KITLV, Redactie. "Book Reviews." Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 163, no. 4 (2008): 559–621. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134379-90003696.

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Benedict Anderson; Under three flags; Anarchism and the anticolonial imagination (Greg Bankoff) Leakthina Chau-Pech Ollier, Tim Winter (eds); Expressions of Cambodia; The politics of tradition, identity and change (David Chandler) Ying Shing Anthony Chung; A descriptive grammar of Merei (Vanuatu) (Alexandre François) Yasuyuki Matsumoto; Financial fragility and instability in Indonesia (David C. Cole) Mason C. Hoadley; Public administration; Indonesian norms versus Western forms (Jan Kees van Donge) Samuel S. Dhoraisingam; Peranakan Indians of Singapore and Melaka (Joseph M. Fernando) Vatthana Pholsena; Post-war Laos; The politics of culture, history and identity (Volker Grabowksy) Gert Oostindie; De parels en de kroon; Het koningshuis en de koloniën (Hans Hägerdal) Jean-Luc Maurer; Les Javanais du Caillou; Des affres de l’exil aux aléas de l’intégration; Sociologie historique de la communauté indonésienne de Nouvelle-Calédonie (Menno Hecker) Richard Stubbs; Rethinking Asia’s economic miracle; The political economy of war, prosperity and crisis (David Henley) Herman Th. Verstappen; Zwerftocht door een wereld in beweging (Sjoerd R. Jaarsma) Klokke, A.H. (ed. and transl.); Fishing, hunting and headhunting in the former culture of the Ngaju Dayak in Central Kalimantan; Notes from the manuscripts of the Ngaju Dayak authors Numan Kunum and Ison Birim; from the Legacy of Dr. H. Schaerer; With a recent additional chapter on hunting by Katuah Mia (Monica Janowski) Ian Proudfoot; Old Muslim calendars of Southeast Asia (Nico J.G. Kaptein) Garry Rodan; Transparency and authoritarian rule in Southeast Asia (Soe Tjen Marching) Greg Fealy, Virginia Hooker (eds); Voices of Islam in Southeast Asia; A contemporary sourcebook (Dick van der Meij) Eko Endarmoko; Tesaurus Bahasa Indonesia (Don van Minde) Charles J.-H. Macdonald; Uncultural behavior; An anthropological investigation of suicide in the southern Philippines (Raul Pertierra) Odd Arne Westad, Sophie Quinn-Judge (eds); The Third Indochina War; Conflict between China, Vietnam and Cambodia, 1972-79 (Vatthana Pholsena) B. Bouman; Ieder voor zich en de Republiek voor ons allen; De logistiek achter de Indonesische Revolutie 1945-1950 (Harry A. Poeze) Michel Gilquin; The Muslims of Thailand (Nathan Porath) Tom Boellstorff; The gay archipelago; Sexuality and nation in Indonesia (Raquel Reyes) Kathleen M. Adams; Art as politics; Re-crafting identities, tourism, and power in Tana Toraja, Indonesia (Dik Roth) Aris Ananta, Evi Nurvidya Arifin, Leo Suryadinata; Emerging democracy in Indonesia (Henk Schulte Nordholt) Casper Schuring; Abdulgani; 70 jaar nationalist van het eerste uur (Nico G. Schulte Nordholt) Geoff Wade (ed. and transl.); Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi-lu; An open access resource (Heather Sutherland) Alexander Horstmann, Reed L. Wadley (eds); Centering the margin; Agency and narrative in Southeast Asian Borderlands (Nicholas Tapp) Marieke Brand, Henk Schulte Nordholt, Fridus Steijlen (eds); Indië verteld; Herinneringen, 1930-1950 (Jean Gelman Taylor) Tin Maung Maung Than; State dominance in Myanmar; The political economy of industrialization (Sean Turnell) Henk Schulte Nordholt, Ireen Hoogenboom (eds); Indonesian transitions (Robert Wessing) In: Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde no. 163 (20075), no: 4, Leiden
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Nathan Roth"

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Kinzel, Till. "Die Tragödie und Komödie des amerikanischen Lebens : eine Studie zu Zuckermans Amerika in Philip Roths Amerika-Trilogie /." Heidelberg : Winter, 2006. http://www.gbv.de/dms/bs/toc/515926825.pdf.

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Kinzel, Till. "Die Tragödie und Komödie des amerikanischen Lebens eine Studie zu Zuckermans Amerika in Philip Roths Amerika-Trilogie." Heidelberg Winter, 2005. http://deposit.d-nb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=2837298&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm.

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Anderson, Daniel Paul. "Plato's Complaint: Nathan Zuckerman, The University of Chicago, and Philip Roth's Neo-Aristotelian Poetics." online version, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=case1196434510.

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Wöltje, Wiebke-Maria. ""My finger on the pulse of the nation" intellektuelle Protagonisten im Romanwerk Philip Roths." Trier Wiss. Verl. Trier, 2006. http://deposit.d-nb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=2836178&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm.

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Ferreira, Jefferson Cavalcante. "Perfis estrat?gicos e percep??o da qualidade: um estudo nos restaurantes da rota tur?stica de Natal-RN." Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, 2012. http://repositorio.ufrn.br:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/18145.

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Made available in DSpace on 2014-12-17T15:51:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 JeffersonCF_DISSERT.pdf: 1057612 bytes, checksum: b328ce60984257349c320d4d1faa1ab3 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012-05-28
This work is a study of strategic management of catering establishments in the tourist route from Natal, through the study of the strategic profile of the manager and the level of satisfaction with the quality of services offered. Identifies the strategic profile prevalent in the studied sector, measures the level of customer satisfaction with services and associate the two constructs to distinguish the services of strategic profile. Uses population of 33 restaurants, built for convenience, from a list composed establishments associated with the Brazilian Association of Bars and Restaurants - ABRASEL, Veja magazine Christmas food and drink 2011/2012 and information from the natives. It presents statistical methodology used for descriptive bivariate analysis complemented by quantitative data. The quantitative characteristics of the population shows non-normality checked by the Shapiro-Wilks. Used the Kruskal-Wallis test for the realization of the association of variables and the Mann-Whitney test to perform post-test. It shows the strategic profile prevalent in the sector of restoration in Natal is the analyzer, although other types were detected. Notes that the level of satisfaction with the quality of service is getting a high score approximately 5 points in a 6-point Likert scale. Demonstrates that the client can tell the quality of services between the different strategic profiles. Identifies distinction between services provided by prospector profile compared to other profiles, indicating the size as the tangible aspects that presents noticeable difference. Certifies that these variables affect the environment of the restaurant in the building of strategic profile and reflect on the service provided. Concludes that the quality of services provided by catering establishments is influenced by the type of establishment and strategic profile of the study of this relation to establishments offering development opportunities and improving the quality of their services
Este trabalho consiste no estudo da gest?o estrat?gica dos estabelecimentos de restaura??o na rota tur?stica da cidade de Natal, atrav?s do estudo do perfil estrat?gico do gestor e o n?vel de satisfa??o da qualidade dos servi?os oferecidos. Identifica o perfil estrat?gico prevalente no setor estudado, mede o n?vel de satisfa??o com os servi?os prestados e associa os dois. Utiliza popula??o de 33 restaurantes, constru?da por conveni?ncia, a partir de uma lista composta com os estabelecimentos associados na Associa??o Brasileira de Bares e Restaurantes ABRASEL, revista Veja Natal comer e beber 2011/2012 e informa??es de nativos. Apresenta metodologia estat?stica empregada de natureza descritiva quantitativa complementada pela an?lise bivariada dos dados. O quantitativo populacional possui caracter?sticas da n?o normalidade verificada atrav?s do teste de Shapiro-Wilks. Utiliza os testes de Kruskal-Wallis para a realiza??o da associa??o das vari?veis e do teste de Mann-Whitney para a realiza??o do p?s-teste. Mostra que o perfil estrat?gico prevalente no setor da restaura??o em Natal ? o analisador ,embora tenham sido detectadas as demais tipologias. Constata que o n?vel de satisfa??o com a qualidade dos servi?os prestados ? elevado obtendo pontua??o aproximada de 5 pontos em uma escala Likert de 6 pontos. Demonstra que o cliente consegue distinguir a qualidade dos servi?os entre os perfis estrat?gicos distintos. Identifica distin??o entre os servi?os prestados pelo perfil prospector em rela??o aos demais perfis, indicando a dimens?o aspectos tang?veis como a que apresenta diferen?a percept?vel. Atesta que vari?veis presentes no ambiente do restaurante interferem na constru??o do perfil estrat?gico e refletem na presta??o do servi?o prestado. Conclui que a qualidade dos servi?os prestados pelos estabelecimentos de restaura??o ? influenciada pelo do tipo do perfil estrat?gico do estabelecimento e que o estudo desta rela??o oferta aos estabelecimentos oportunidade de desenvolvimento e aprimoramento da qualidade dos seus servi?os
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"What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank: Re-Forming Holocaust Memory Through The Fictional Narratives of Cynthia Ozick, Philip Roth, and Nathan Englander." Master's thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57315.

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abstract: This thesis analyzes the unsettling presence of the Holocaust in Cynthia Ozick’s The Shawl (1980), Philip Roth’s The Ghost Writer (1979), and Nathan Englander’s What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank (2013). Characters in these texts struggle to maintain a stable sense of what it means to be Jewish in America outside of a relationship to the Holocaust. This leaves the characters only able to form negative associations about what it means to live with the memory of the Holocaust or to over-identify so heavily with the memory that they can’t lead a normal life. These authors construct a re-formed memory of the Holocaust in ways that prompt a new focus on how permanently intertwined the Holocaust and Jewish identity are. In this context, re-formed means the way Jewish American writers have reconstructed the connection between Jewish identity and its relation to the Holocaust in ways that highlight issues of over-identification and negative identity associations. By pushing past the trope of unspeakability that often surrounds the Holocaust, these authors construct a re-formed memory that allows for the formation of Jewish American identity as permanently bound with constant Holocaust preoccupation, the memory of Anne Frank, and the Holocaust itself. The authors’ treatment of issues surrounding Jewish identity contribute to the genre of post-Holocaust literature, which focuses on re-forming the discussion about present day Jewish American connection to the Holocaust. Giving voice to the Holocaust in new ways provides an opportunity for current and future generations of Jewish Americans to again consider the continued importance of the Holocaust as a historical event within the Jewish community. In a world that is once again becoming increasingly anti-semitic as a result of the current political climate, white supremacist riots, desecration of Jewish grave sites, and shootings at temples, the discussion that these texts open up is increasingly important and should remain at the forefront of American consciousness. The research in this thesis reveals that through the process of Holocaust memory constantly being re-formed through the work of these Jewish American authors, its continued influence on Jewish American culture is not forgotten.
Dissertation/Thesis
Masters Thesis English 2020
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Books on the topic "Nathan Roth"

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Philip Roth and the Zuckerman books: The making of a storyworld. Amherst, NY: Cambria Press, 2011.

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Roth, Philip A. Zuckerman bound: A trilogy and epilogue 1979-1985. New York: Library of America, 2007.

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Roth, Philip A. Zuckerman bound. New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1985.

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Beraḳ, Israel) Kolel avrekhim Breslev (Bene. Nafal nehora: Divre hesped ṿe-hitʻorerut she-neʼemru ʻal siluḳo shel ha-g. he-ḥ. Rabi Natan Tsevi Ḳenig, zatsal, rosh Kolel Breslev. Zikhron Meʼir, B.B. [z.o. Bene Beraḳ: Kolel Breslev, 1997.

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Rozenṭal, Ḥayim Shelomoh. Be-khol nafshekha: Toldot ḥayaṿ u-ketsot derakhaṿ ba-ḳodesh shel maran ha-gaʼon Rabi Natan Tsevi Finḳel, z. ts. ṿe-ḳ. l., rosh Yeshivat Mir. Yerushalayim: Rozenṭal, 2012.

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Mosdot Binyan Tsiyon (Bene Beraḳ, Israel), ed. Ner Tsiyon: Halakhot u-minhagim le-Yom ṭov ule-ḥag ha-Shavuʻot : be-tosefet pesaḳaṿ ṿe-horaʼotaṿ shel mo. r. rosh ha-yeshivah, ʻamud ha-horaʼah ṿeha-yirʼah, ha-gaʼon ha-gadol Rabi Ben Tsiyon Aba Shaʼul, z.l.l.h.h. : ṿe-ʻa. pi ha-nahug bi-ḳ.ḳ. Binyan Tsiyon t.k.B.Ts. be-rashut a.b.d. ṿe-rosh ha-Yeshivah mo. r. ha-gaʼon Rabi Natan ben Senyor, sheliṭa. [B.B.]: [Mosdot Binyan Tsiyon], 2012.

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Roth, Philip A. Zuckerman Bound : The Ghost Writer, Zuckerman Unbound, the Anatomy Lesson, Epilogue : The Prague Orgy. Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1985.

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Roth, Philip A. Zuckerman Bound : A Trilogy and Epilogue. Random House Value Publishing, 1987.

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Roth, Philip A. Zuckerman Bound. Vintage, 1998.

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Zuckerman encadenado. Seix Barral, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Nathan Roth"

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Gatt, Sabine. "Rot-Weiß-Rot exklusiv? Dialektische Diskriminierungen im Namen der Nation(alsprache)." In Migrationsforschung als Kritik?, 161–74. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-531-19144-7_10.

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Schunk, Erich. "»Schwarz, roth und Gold«. Popularisierung und Unterdrückung eines politischen Symbols zur Zeit des Hambacher Festes." In Zwischen Stadt, Staat und Nation, 361–72. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.13109/9783666301698.361.

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Brauner, David. "The trials of Nathan Zuckerman, or Jewry as jury." In Philip Roth. Manchester University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.7765/9781847791641.00008.

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Brauner, David. "The trials of Nathan Zuckerman, or Jewry as jury: judging Jews in Zuckerman Bound." In Philip Roth, 21–43. Manchester University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9780719074240.003.0002.

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Nadel, Ira. "Thinking in Straight Lines." In Philip Roth, 331–65. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199846108.003.0010.

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“Thinking in Straight Lines:” Roth in the 1980s was knocked about by health, and his strained relationship with Bloom, became restless with England and began to question his identity, which found expression in The Counterlife, as experimental in form as in its story. Collectively, these events prevented any “straight thinking.” The chapter also narrates the growing role of Nathan Zuckerman in his writing, plus Roth’s friendships (and then nonfriendships) with James Atlas and Ross Miller, his first official biographer (later fired), and his longtime friend Theodore Solotaroff. The centrality of The Anatomy Lesson from 1983, focusing on pain and healing, receives extended discussion. Three years later Roth, with his friend David Plante, visit Israel, an experience that reappears in Operation Shylock. During this time, Roth signs with the ambitious literary agent Andrew Wylie and through him renews several mega literary deals reestablishing Roth’s financial clout. Other topics include Roth’s meaningful friendship with Primo Levi, interviewed in 1986 (and dead the following year) and the increasing role of mortality in his writing, intensified by the death of his father in 1989 and then the publication of Patrimony in 1991.
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Dean, Andrew. "Ghosts." In Metafiction and the Postwar Novel, 116–68. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198871408.003.0004.

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This chapter examines how Philip Roth responds to Jewish American readers and contexts in his fiction. Roth exploits the tensions and transitions in Jewish American political aspirations in the period, setting heated political debates about assimilation and particularism against different measurements of value in the novel. By using live cultural debates from the period, Roth courts ethnic categorization, while ultimately relativizing such categories in his attempt to pursue alternative understandings of literary value. In Roth’s earlier ‘Nathan Zuckerman’ fictions, the comedy and intelligence emerge through his practice of contrasting the ‘humble needs’ of a desiring body with the rush either to pass political judgement or to withdraw the novel from the complications of embodied life. The second half of the chapter demonstrates how Roth engages both directly and indirectly with the work of Hannah Arendt and the 1950s context for thinking about the Holocaust. This section of the chapter focuses in particular on an unpublished screenplay housed in Roth’s literary archive.
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"Race, Nation, and the “Roto Chileno”." In The Chile Reader, 213–16. Duke University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9780822395836-043.

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Canny, Nicholas. "Composing Counter-Narratives in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries." In Imagining Ireland's Pasts, 29–59. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808961.003.0002.

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This chapter explains how denigration of all Irish people by apocalyptic authors, and the conquest that it legitimized, proved traumatic for all Irish people whether at home or in exile. Annalists despaired of the future but Irish authors from Gaelic and English ancestries who had found refuge in Catholic Europe took inspiration from Catholic histories they encountered there to compose histories in Latin, Irish, and English defending Ireland’s reputation, and arguing from history that foreign powers should sustain Ireland and Catholicism. Divisions emerged between authors, notably Philip O’Sullivan Beare, who advocated renewed warfare, and those, notably David Rothe and Geoffrey Keating, who wrote conciliatory narratives. These argued from history that Catholics of both ancestries in Ireland had been bonded by religion into a single nation, and that Catholics who still prevailed in Ireland should owe allegiance to the British monarchy.
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Grasso, Christopher. "Heaven on Earth." In Teacher, Preacher, Soldier, Spy, 380–408. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197547328.003.0018.

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In 1886, after moving to Colorado and marrying Etta Dunbar, Kelso described himself, even as he struggled to get a disability pension for the worsening effects of his wartime injuries, as “one of the happiest of men.” But with news of the Haymarket Affair in Chicago, where labor radicals were executed as bomb-throwing terrorists, he plunged into another public crisis. Angrily rethinking some of his core beliefs, he decided that Haymarket had exposed the hopeless rot of the American political and economic system. In his last years, after writing his autobiography, he turned to the story of the nation he had fought and bled for, looking for a better way forward. His last book, Government Analyzed, completed by his wife after his death in 1891, reinterpreted the Civil War and offered a defense of anarchism. His last lectures described Jesus as an anarchistic reformer, hoping for a heaven on earth.
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10

Schopp, Susan E. "French Private Trade at Canton, 1698–1833." In The Private Side of the Canton Trade, 1700-1840. Hong Kong University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888390939.003.0004.

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Private trade played a legitimate and important role in Sino-French trade at the very start, as members of the private sector to whom the Compagnie des Indes (French East India Company) leased its monopoly on a limited basis were responsible for carrying out the first two decades of France’s trade with China (1698-1719). Leasing ceased under the second Compagnie (1719-1769); during this era, private trade took the form of the port-permis (‘privilege trade’) and non-Europe (‘country’) trade.When the second Compagnie’s monopoly was suspended in 1769, a period of wholly private trade followed, marking the first time that a nation possessing an East India company abolished that company’s monopoly and opened commerce with China and elsewhere to the private sector. The large number of merchant voyages from France to Canton during this fifteen-year period (1770–1785) shows that private traders were well capable of taking advantage of the new opportunities that were offered. Although a third Compagnie was created in 1785, its abolition eight years later (1793) opened the door for all subsequent Sino-French trade to be conducted by persons in the private sector. Profiles of François and Edmond Rothe, Mr. Thimothée, Gilles Sebire, Julien Bourgogne, François Terrien, and Charles de Constant provide examples of the varied experiences of private traders; three of these individuals earlier served as Compagnie employees.
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