Academic literature on the topic 'Ravelstein'
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Journal articles on the topic "Ravelstein"
Wildman, Kathleen, and Saul Bellow. "Ravelstein." Antioch Review 59, no. 1 (2001): 118. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4614123.
Full textJacobs, Rita D., and Saul Bellow. "Ravelstein." World Literature Today 74, no. 4 (2000): 813. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40156132.
Full textKurland, Stuart M., Saul Bellow, J. M. Coetzee, and Philip Roth. "Ravelstein." Academe 87, no. 4 (2001): 58. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40252046.
Full textNichols, David K. "Ravelstein: Introduction." Perspectives on Political Science 32, no. 1 (January 2003): 9–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10457090309604830.
Full textZuckert, Michael. "On Ravelstein." Perspectives on Political Science 32, no. 1 (January 2003): 22–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10457090309604833.
Full textStefanek, Tomasz. "Klasyczna lekcja umiarkowania. Allan Bloom o relacji między filozofem a wspólnotą polityczną." Civitas. Studia z Filozofii Polityki 14 (January 30, 2012): 207–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.35757/civ.2012.14.10.
Full textUhr, John. "The Rage Over Ravelstein." Philosophy and Literature 24, no. 2 (2000): 451–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/phl.2000.0049.
Full textMeyers, Jeffrey. "Unraveling Ravelstein: A New Interpretation." Hopkins Review 13, no. 4 (2020): 603–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/thr.2020.0089.
Full textJaffe-Foger, Miriam. "To Sing the Body Sidatique: Illness in Saul Bellow’s Ravelstein." Revue Française d Etudes Américaines 143, no. 2 (2015): 10. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rfea.143.0010.
Full textMarrouchi, Ramzi, and Rimeh Saleh Alyahya. "In the Ethics of Strangers: Saul Bellow Drawing Boundaries of No ‘M’an’s Land." Arab World English Journal For Translation and Literary Studies 6, no. 1 (February 24, 2022): 30–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.24093/awejtls/vol6no1.3.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Ravelstein"
Chen, Chia-Yin, and 陳嘉茵. "Intellectuals Accommodating: A Study of Saul Bellow''s Herzog, Humboldt''s Gift, The Dean''s December, and Ravelstein." Thesis, 2007. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/58663316116062991326.
Full text淡江大學
英文學系博士班
95
This dissertation explores the problem and process of the isolated intellectual’s accommodation in four of American author Saul Bellow’s novels: Herzog, Humboldt’s Gift,The Dean’s December,and Ravelstein. The protagonists of these novels, most of whom are, like Bellow, of European-Jewish background,feel alienated from the mainstream, mid-to-late-20th-century U.S. society, and try in various ways to more fully enter into it. Yet “accommodation,” as it is interpreted here, really means a going-halfway, a process of mediation through which the character maintains his own individual, subjective integrity as a “thinker” while also communicating and interacting more with others (including the “masses,” the non-intellectuals), that is, engaging more actively in the “mass culture.”The novels’protagonists, although they manage to “fit into” the larger society to varying degrees,share a keen awareness of the need for the internal and subjective—as opposed to the merely external, the commercial, financial, mechanical, technological—and for a sense of humanity, a “law of the heart,” a compassionate attitude toward a suffering (and indeed increasingly alienated) mankind. However, this mode of the individual’s accommodation with his society is also closed to another key duality, that of mind (or soul) and body (or material world). They thus seek an accommodation or mediation between such opposite ideas or values as self and other, individual and social, internal and external, thinking and feeling, past and present, local and universal. These novels seem to be structured, then, around a dialectical dynamic, a pulling- both-ways, just as the characters are inevitably driven by inner conflicts, often perplexed and confused, moving in both directions at once. But this is a very human complexity, and Bellow describes it with great energy and passion.
RIMA, Matteo. "Il romanzo testamento." Doctoral thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/11562/396537.
Full textThe aim of this doctoral thesis is to identify and to define a new and previously unseen literary sub-genre: the “testamentary novel”. By saying so, I embrace all the works of literature that have been written by an author who is living within the “dimension of death”, that is to say the stage of life in which the idea of death has become overwhelming. This may happen because of three main reasons: old age, severe illness or suicidal tendencies. Three different situations that originate three different kinds of narratives: a man who faces death in his old age writes relatively peacefully, knowing that he has naturally come to the end of his life; a man who dies prematurely, by illness, regrets all the future years that he won’t be able to live and writes works of literature that vibrate with narrative tension; a man who voluntarily gives an end to his own life addresses the whole world as if to defy it, and yet writes in a cold and detached style. After these three chapters there is an appendix in which I analyze three other novels: they were initially meant for the already existing chapters, but then I realized that they didn’t belong there, being quite eccentric and avoiding every clear classification, so I left them out. However, they were too pertinent to be totally ignored, so I put them in this separate section (that so became a sort of fourth chapter). Chapter 1. The old writer and death. In this first chapter I analyze the following novels: Deux anglaises et le continent (Henri-Pierre Roché, 1956), Mercy of a Rude Stream (Henry Roth, 1994-1998), The Captain Is Out to Lunch and the Sailors Have Taken Over the Ship (Charles Bukowski, 1998) and Ravelstein (Saul Bellow, 2000). Written by aged authors (spanning the age range 72 to 89, Bukowski being the “youngest” and Roth the oldest), these four narratives are either entirely or partially autobiographical: Roché tells a story about his long gone youth; Roth retraces (in a four-volumes and 1500 pages novel) the thirteen years he lived in Harlem as a kid, between 1914 and 1927; Bukowski keeps an actual diary in which he writes about his daily life; Bellow gives an accout of his friendship with the recently deceased Abe Ravelstein. The only writer who uses his real name in the narrative is Bukowski, whereas the other ones adopt three well recognizable alter-egos. Chapter 2. The writer and the illness. The second chapter begins with the last two novels written by Leonardo Sciascia, Il cavaliere e la morte (1988) and Una storia semplice (1989). These novels are followed by the shortest story analyzed in this thesis: “Nel frattempo”, a six-pages graphic novel that Magnus (Roberto Raviola’s nom de plume) wrote and drew in 1996; the second chapter is completed by Le soleil des mourants, a novel by Jean-Claude Izzo (1999). These narratives have been written by authors who were severely ill and were fully aware that they would die shortly. Each one of the four stories is partly autobiographical, but no one of them is completely autobiographical: Sciascia writes two detective novels, Magnus writes a sort of dark comedy and Izzo writes an extremely dramatic story which resembles a classic tragedy. The four protagonists have one thing in common: they all face illness, sometimes actual (Il cavaliere e la morte, Le soleil des mourants) and sometimes metaphorical (Una storia semplice, “Nel frattempo”). The only one of them who clearly wins this peculiar battle is Magnus’ character; the other ones all suffer a defeat (a total defeat in Le soleil des mourants and Il cavaliere e la morte, a partial defeat in Una storia semplice). Capitolo 3. The writer and suicide. The four works of literature analyzed in the third chapter are the following ones: Le feu follet (Pierre Drieu la Rochelle, 1931), Dissipatio H.G. (Guido Morselli, 1973), “Good Old Neon” (David Foster Wallace, 2004) and Suicide (Édouard Levé, 2008). Written by authors who have actually committed suicide, these narratives tell the stories of four suicidal men: three of them are biographical accounts (Feu follet tells about Jacques Rigaut’s suicide, while “Good Old Neon” and Suicide are inspired by the suicides committed some years before by two acquaintances of the authors), the fourth one is entirely fictional. However, these biographical accounts are deliberately inaccurate, so the characters portrayed by the writers become eventually their partial alter-egos. Two of the four narratives take place in a completely realistic setting; on the other hand, the background of the other two is imaginary and fantastic, as if to suggest the authors’ desire to leave the world he’s still living in. Appendix. (Un)aware to die. In this appendix, which is a sort of fourth chapter, three novels are analyzed: Palomar (Italo Calvino, 1983), Gli ultimi giorni di Pompeo (Andrea Pazienza, 1987) and Camere separate (Pier Vittorio Tondelli, 1989). The third one has been written by a man who was suffering from AIDS and was therefore aware that he wouldn’t survive much longer (even if he couldn’t foresee the specific moment of his future demise, of course); on the contrary, the two other novels have been written by two healthy men who couldn’t imagine that they would die a few months after having completed their works; nevertheless, at the end of their narratives they both kill their main character (who is clearly their alter-ego). There is indeed a connection between the death of the character and the death of the author, and this appendix aims to identify it. After having analyzed these fifteen narratives I realized that different kinds of death originate different kinds of writing. The man who dies in the relative peacefulness of his old age is naturally encouraged to write about his past life, so he can relive it one last time. When a man dies prematurely, because of an incurable disease, he regrets all the future years that he won’t be able to live: he writes a somehow educational work of literature, a novel containing a universal message that aims to teach something to the ones who will survive him; in order to reach the maximum amount of readers, he makes use of an “easy” genre, such as comedy or detective novel. He does so because he wants to use his narrative in order to exert a sort of influence over the future (even if, or just because, he knows that he won’t be there in person). The suicidal man writes his final novel as if it were a long suicide letter: he shows off his strong desire to leave this life by making up imaginary worlds or else describing a reality that doesn’t fit him, a world in which he just can’t find his proper place. Apart from the kind of death that awaits them, the writers who have reached the final stage of their life don’t use metaphors or circumlocution: in their novels, they plainly present their own situation. So, the main characters of their testamentary works of literature are old men who muse about dying, or persons severely ill, or young men with suicidal tendencies: in short, these characters are total or partial alter-egos who have the specific duty of standing in for their creators.
Books on the topic "Ravelstein"
Saul, Bellow. Ravelstein. [Rockland, MA]: Compass Press, 2001.
Find full textSaul, Bellow. Ravelstein. New York: Viking, 2000.
Find full textSaul, Bellow. Ravelstein. New York: Viking, 2000.
Find full textSaul, Bellow. Ravelstein. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Rocco, 2001.
Find full textThe Ravelston affair. Long Preston: Dales, 2008.
Find full text(Edinburgh), MES Sports Centre. MES Sports Centre, Ravelston, Edinburgh, incorporating the National Cricket Academy. [S.l.]: [s.n.], 2000.
Find full textHamilton, David. Early golf atEdinburgh & Leith: The account books of Sir John Foulis of Ravelston. Glasgow: at the Partick Press, 1988.
Find full textSaul, Bellow. Ravelstein. Penguin Books, Limited, 2013.
Find full textSaul, Bellow. Ravelstein. Viking, 2000.
Find full textSaul, Bellow. Ravelstein. Penguin Books, Limited, 2001.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Ravelstein"
Garrett, Leah. "The Late Bellow: Ravelstein and the Novel of Ideas." In The Cambridge Companion to Saul Bellow, 171–82. Cambridge University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781316266175.016.
Full textSandy, Mark. "Fictions of the Self and Nature: Reading Romanticism in Saul Bellow." In Transatlantic Transformations of Romanticism, 91–116. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474421485.003.0005.
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