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Chapter 10: Late Twentieth Century and Postmodernism
Philip Roth
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Page Links: | Primary Works | Selected Bibliography 2000-Present | MLA Style Citation of this Web Page |
Site Links: | Chap. 10: Index | Alphabetical List | Table Of Contents | Home Page |
Source: The
Philip Roth Society
Goodbye, Columbus: and five short stories. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1959.Letting go. NY: Random House, 1962.
When she was good. NY: Random House, 1967.
Portnoy's complaint. NY: Random House, 1969.
Our gang (starring Tricky and his friends). NY: Random House, 1971.
The breast. NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1972.
The great American novel. NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1973.
My life as a man. NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974.
Reading myself and others. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1975.
The professor of desire. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1977.
The ghost writer. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979.
Zuckerman unbound. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1981.
The anatomy lesson. NY: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1983.
Zuckerman bound. NY: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1985.
The counterlife. NY: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1986.
The facts: a novelist's autobiography. NY: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1988.
Deception: a novel. NY: Simon and Schuster, 1990.
Patrimony: a true story. NY: Simon and Schuster, 1991.
Operation Shylock: a confession. NY: Simon & Schuster, 1993.
Sabbath's theater. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1995.
American pastoral. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1997.
I married a communist. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1998.
The human stain. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2000.
The dying animal. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2001.
Shop talk: a writer and his colleagues and their work. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2001.
The plot against America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 2004.
Novels, 1967-1972. NY: Library of America: Distributed in the U.S. by Penguin Putnam, 2005.
Novels & stories, 1959-1962. NY: Library of America: Distributed in the U.S. by Penguin Putnam, 2005.
Everyman. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2006.
Novels, 1973-1977. NY: Library of America: Distributed in the United States by Penguin Putnam Inc., 2006.
Exit ghost. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2007.
Indignation. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 2008.
Selected Bibliography 2000-Present
Avishai, Bernard. Promiscuous: 'Portnoy's Complaint' and Our Doomed Pursuit of Happiness. New Haven, CT: Yale UP, 2012.
Kimmage, Michael. In History's Grip: Philip Roth's Newark Trilogy. Stanford, CA: Stanford UP, 2012.
Masiero, Pia. Philip Roth and the Zuckerman Books: The Making of a Storyworld. Amherst, NY: Cambria, 2011.
Milowitz, Steven. Philip Roth Considered: The Concentrationary Universe of the American Writer. NY: Garland, 2000.
Morley, Catherine. The Quest for Epic in Contemporary American Fiction: John Updike, Philip Roth and Don DeLillo. NY: Routledge, 2009.
Posnock, Ross. Philip Roth's rude truth: the art of immaturity. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2006.
Pierpont, Claudia R. Roth Unbound: A Writer and His Books. NY: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2013.
Safer, Elaine B. Mocking the age: the later novels of Philip Roth. Albany: State University of NY P, 2006.
Shechner, Mark. Up Society's Ass, Copper: Rereading Philip Roth. Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 2003.
Shostak, Debra. Philip Roth-Countertexts, Counterlives. Columbia: U of South Carolina P, 2004.
Statlander, Jane. Philip Roth's Postmodern American Romance: Critical Essays on Selected Works. NY: Peter Lang, 2011.
Philip Roth dies at 85; novelist both probed and skewered Jewish American cult
By SCOTT MARTELLE
MAY 22, 2018 LA Times
Author Philip Roth,
who tackled self-perception, sexual freedom, his own Jewish identity
and the conflict between modern and traditional morals through novels
that he once described as "hypothetical autobiographies," has died. He
was 85.
Roth was one of America's preeminent 20th century novelists in a career
that began in the 1950s and continued up until nearly the end of his
life, resulting in more than 30 novels and short-story collections over
seven decades. His work persistently blurred the lines between fiction
and memoir, and often left readers both smitten and outraged,
particularly in his portrayal of Jewish American life in stories drawn
from his boyhood in the predominately Jewish Weequahic neighborhood of
Newark, N.J.
At the time his
novel "Nemesis" was released in late 2010, Roth was still writing eight
hours a day. However, two years later he said in an interview with
French magazine Les Inrocks that after re-reading his novels at age 74
he concluded he was finished.
"I wanted to see whether I had wasted my time writing," he said in the
interview. "After that, I decided that I was done with fiction. I no
longer want to read, to write, I don't even want to talk about it
anymore.... It's enough."
In addition to his
novels, Roth spent 15 years editing the "Writers from the Other Europe"
series of books for Penguin; conducted a series of interviews with such
fellow writers as Primo Levi, Isaac Bashevis Singer and Edna O'Brien
that was published in 2001 as "Shop Talk"; and was an active member of
PEN, the international organization supporting writers and fighting
censorship.
He began writing fiction while working on a master's degree in English
at the University of Chicago, and he published his first short story,
"The Day It Snowed," in a 1955 issue of the Chicago Review. The next
year he began work on a doctorate, but he quit just weeks into the
program, deciding to become a writer instead.
Roth's first book, "Goodbye, Columbus and Five Short Stories," came out
in 1959, propelling him to national prominence and the first of his two
National Book Awards. The titular novella explored the cultural divide
between working-class Neil Klugman and the beautiful Brenda Patemkin,
whose upper-middle-class life of consumption and privilege Roth
lampooned unmercifully, drawing early rumbles that he was a self-hating
Jew.
After several years of personal and creative crisis, which sent Roth to
the psychoanalyst's couch, he reached an unparalleled level of infamy
in 1969 with "Portnoy's Complaint," a graphically ribald first-person
story of a sex-obsessed young Jewish man confessing his sordid and
comedic encounters (and self-gratification) to his psychoanalyst. Roth
once described the novel as a "hyper-realistic farce," and some critics
reveled in the satire; others saw it as sophomoric and anti-Semitic.
Roth saw the novel as "a book about brutality," he told the Los Angeles
Times in 2006.
"It's brutal in its language, it's brutal in its observations and it's
about the emotional brutality of family," Roth said. "For me, the most
telling scene, even at the time of the writing, is the one in which he
talks about the battle between his cousin and his uncle over the cousin
dating a gentile girl. The father goes to the girl, or he calls her — I
forget the circumstances — and he pays her money to leave the son
alone.... And then the son, who's a strong kid, has a fight with his
father in the basement, and the father pins him to the floor and beats
him. That was the guts of the book. The conflict, the elemental
conflict, grows out of a real history. And so does the rest of it."
Readers made "Portnoy's Complaint" a bestseller, and the income from
the book, combined with the movie rights to "Goodbye, Columbus," gave
Roth the financial freedom to quit his teaching job at the University
of Pennsylvania and devote himself to writing full time.
Roth continued to both probe and skewer Jewish American culture in what
New York magazine called a "career-long obsession with the unruliness
of human life." Over the years Roth produced some books that were
deemed second-rate by critics, but he also created a long line of
highly praised novels, including many in the nine-book Zuckerman series
centering on his literary alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman.
"With the Zuckerman books, I was interested in several things," Roth
said in the Times interview. "One was what it was to be an artist…. The
theme — not that I explicitly stated it — was the unforeseen
consequences of this vocation. And the high-mindedness that generally
goes into taking it on in the first place. And the education in the
uses to which the world puts it. It was that comedy I wanted to write."
In the view of Times book critic David Ulin, Roth reached his full
stride in his 60s, beginning with "Operation Shylock: A Confession" in
1993, followed by "Sabbath's Theater" (1995, and Roth's second National
Book Award winner); the American Trilogy of "American Pastoral" (1997,
winner of the Pulitzer Prize), "I Married a Communist" (1998) and "The
Human Stain" (2000); and capped by "The Plot Against America" (2004),
in which Roth envisioned Charles Lindbergh besting FDR in the 1940
presidential election and, instead of leading the United States into a
fight with the Nazis, opting to make them allies.
Roth said in a 2011 interview with Benjamin Taylor that he tended to
write in response to whatever work he had just finished. "Sabbath's
Theater" centered on the grotesquely mean Mickey Sabbath, which led
Roth to build his next novel, "American Pastoral," around a more decent
and likable character, Swede Levov, whose life is knocked off track by
the tumult of the 1960s.
"What may happen is that when you finish, certainly, a long book, that
you stage a rebellion against that book, and write a different kind of
book," Roth said.
As Roth aged, so did his protagonists in a late-career series of short
novels that New Yorker editor and Roth's friend David Remnick described
as "death-soaked," with Roth bringing his characters — and himself — to
the brink of their own mortality in 2007's "Everyman." The novel arose,
Roth said at the time, from his realization that his own "fairy-tale
narrative" of the arc of life had warped. He said people expect their
grandparents to die, and then parents, followed by this refusal to
acknowledge personal mortality — until friends, age peers, begin
dropping.
"That," Roth said, "was more devastating, strangely, than my parents
dying, because it's not in the fairy tale. Your friends? How could they
die? You went to college with these people. How can we be burying so
and so? How can he be dead? How can we be at her funeral? It's
devastating. And that was the instigating incident."
As in most of Roth's later works, history — both personal and cultural
— weighs heavily. "Why?" Roth said. "Because I had gotten to be 50 or
60 years old, I think, and I could now look back on the time of life
with a historical perspective. You can't do that when you're young."
Roth begins the first-person "Everyman" at the unnamed narrator's
burial in a cemetery co-founded by the character's grandfather in a
bucolic field that had become "the butt end of the airport and what
you're hearing from a few miles away is the steady din of the New
Jersey Turnpike," his daughter tells the mourners.
There was, Roth continues in the narrator's voice, "up and down the
state that day five hundred funerals like his … no more or less
interesting than any of the others. But then it's the commonness that's
most wrenching, the registering once more of the fact of death that
overwhelms everything…. Of course, as when anyone dies, though many
were grief-stricken, others remained unperturbed, or found themselves
relieved, or, for reasons good or bad, were genuinely pleased."
That sense of dark comedy — often scatological and intentionally
provocative — infused Roth's work as he embraced the absurdity of life,
as in this scene from "The Human Stain," in which Zuckerman argues at
the Tanglewood music festival with character Coleman Silk, a disgraced
classics professor who will soon be dead.
"I couldn't stop myself," Silk says. "The stupendous decimation that is
death sweeping us all away. Orchestra, audience, conductor,
technicians, swallows, wrens — think of the numbers for Tanglewood
alone between now and the year 4000. Then multiply that times
everything. The ceaseless perishing. What an idea! What maniac
conceived it?"
These later novels, Remnick wrote in a 2000 New Yorker profile of Roth,
reflected the aging of the author. "His voice is still charged, an
endlessly pliable instrument of comedy and impersonation, but that
voice has also darkened, its comedy is deeper, the story it tells is
more tragic and painful. You find yourself laughing loudest just at the
moment when the abyss widens."
Not everyone got the joke. "I'm not sure Philip always realizes that he
is being outrageous," author Saul Bellow, a strong influence on Roth,
said in the same New Yorker article. "He feels a writer should provoke
— and he should, if that is the way he is inclined — but he can't
expect to evade the results of this provocation. Philip is a radical.
He feels he should treat the bizarre as if it were perfectly normal."
Philip Milton Roth was born March 18, 1933, in the depths of the Great
Depression that forced his father's Newark shoe store into bankruptcy.
Herman Roth, the son of Jewish immigrants, then went to work as a
salesman for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., despite, according to
some reports, open anti-Semitism by his bosses. As a young boy, Philip
Roth lived in an apartment on Summit Avenue (they later moved) with his
father, his mother Bess, and his brother, Sandy, five years his elder.
Critic Joan Acocella, writing in 2004 about "The Plot Against America"
for the New Yorker, reported that Roth had said in earlier interviews
he never felt the sting of anti-Semitism directly, yet he was
"surrounded from birth" with the notion of Jews "as an object of
ridicule, disgust, scorn, contempt, derision, of every heinous form of
persecution and brutality." Those conflicting senses of safety and
persecution would come to define many of his characters, and the
specter of anti-Semitism — the revelations of the Holocaust came during
his formative years — courses through his novels.
Roth graduated from high school in 1950 and spent a year at the Newark
campus of Rutgers University, then entered Bucknell University in
bucolic central Pennsylvania. He thrived academically, and graduated
magna cum laude in 1954 with a bachelor's degree in English, which he
followed up a year later with a master's in English from the University
of Chicago.
After a stint in the Army, Roth returned to the University of Chicago,
where he quickly dropped out of its doctoral program, but continued to
teach as he worked on his writing. He met Margaret Martinson, whom he
married in 1959 after, in his version of the relationship, she used
someone else's urine sample to persuade him she was pregnant. They
separated in 1963 and she died in a car crash in 1968, an event that
deeply affected Roth's work.
Roth married the British actress Claire Bloom, his longtime companion,
in 1990, but the couple divorced five years later. Bloom detailed the
marriage in her 1996 memoir, "Leaving a Doll's House," in which she
said, among other unflattering things, that Roth forced her 18-year-old
daughter from their home because her conversation bored him.
Roth, in the eyes of many critics, returned the favor by patterning the
character Eve Frame in "I Married a Communist" after Bloom, painting
Frame as a social-climbing radio star whose McCarthy-era memoir of her
broken marriage to protagonist Ira Ringold destroys his life.
How much of Roth's work was autobiographical and how much was fiction
is hard to assess — even for Roth. In 1988, he published "The Facts: A
Novelist's Autobiography," a memoir that began with a letter from Roth
asking his Zuckerman character's opinion of the book; it ends with
Zuckerman's reply that Roth shouldn't publish it and instead get back
to writing about Zuckerman.
In "Patrimony," Roth stayed on the truth side of the line as he wrote
about his father's slow death from a brain tumor, a book that won the
National Book Critics Circle Award in 1991, but then returned to
fiction with "Operation Shylock: A Confession," the first in what
became a remarkable stretch of creative success.
Roth was America's most-decorated author, and even a partial list of
his citations is lengthy. The only major award that eluded him was the
Nobel Prize.
Roth twice won the National Book Award and the National Book Critics
Circle Award, and he was a finalist two other times for both awards.
Roth also won three annual PEN/Faulkner Awards for specific works, the
biennial PEN/Nabokov Award for a body of work, and, in 2007, the
inaugural PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction.
After being twice nominated for the biennial Man Booker International
Prize (2005 and 2007), which "highlights one writer's overall
contribution to fiction on the world stage," Roth won in 2011. Yet even
that accolade came weighted with controversy. One of the award jurors,
Carmen Callil, quit after the announcement, dismissing Roth as unworthy
because he "goes on and on and on about the same subject in almost
every single book."
At times during his lengthy career, the criticisms stung, but as Roth
aged he became philosophical about the work, and the reception.
"I don't know yet what this will all add up to, and it no longer
matters, because there's no stopping," he told the New Yorker. "And
this stuff is not going to matter anyway, as we know. So there's no
sense even contemplating it, you know? All you want to do is the
obvious. Just get it right, and the rest is the human comedy: the
evaluations, the lists, the crappy articles, the insults, the praise."
scott.martelle@latimes.com
Twitter: @smartelle
MLA Style Citation of this Web Page
Reuben, Paul P. "Chapter 10: Philip Roth." PAL: Perspectives in American Literature- A Research and Reference Guide. URL: http://www.paulreuben.website/pal/chap10/roth.html (provide page date or date of your login).
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