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Paul Bowles / Gena Dagel Caponi.
Van Pelt Library PS3552.O874 Z6 1998
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LIBRA - Special PS3552.O874 Z6 1998
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- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Caponi-Tabery, Gena.
- Series:
- Twayne's United States author series ; TUSAS 706.
- Twayne's United States author series ; TUSAS 706
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Bowles, Paul, 1910-1999--Criticism and interpretation.
- Bowles, Paul.
- Bowles, Paul, 1910-1999.
- Criticism and interpretation.
- Africa, North--In literature.
- Africa, North.
- North Africa.
- Morocco--In literature.
- Morocco.
- Penn Provenance:
- Gotham Book Mart (former owner) (Gotham Book Mart Collection copy)
- Physical Description:
- xiii, 152 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- New York : Twayne Publishers ; London : Prentice Hall International, [1998]
- Summary:
- In this interpretive biography of Paul Bowles, one of the most intriguing American expatriate writers and composers, Gena Dagel Caponi concentrates on defining Bowles's place in twentieth-century American culture. By exploring the motivations behind his life and work and examining the intricate connections between his emotional life and his literary, musical, and autobiographical creations, Caponi illuminates both Bowles's psychological development and the relationship between his personal idiosyncrasies and the intellectual currents of his time. Caponi draws upon extensive correspondence and interviews not only with Bowles himself but also with Ned Rorem, Gore Vidal, Aaron Copland, Christopher Isherwood, and Virgil Thomson to provide new insights into Bowles's work and his relationships with his wife, Jane; his editor at Random House, David McDowell; his London editors, John Lehmann and Peter Owen; and friends Charles Henri Ford, Ahmed Yacoubi, and Mohammed Mrabet. Through his work, Caponi shows, Bowles contributes as well as responds to such movements as modernism, antimodernism, mysticism, surrealism, and existentialism. His unique combination of nineteenth-century romanticism and twentieth-century existentialism allows him, in both his literature and his music, to focus on a major theme - the plight of the individual who is alienated from his or her culture and feels less than alive. Caponi notes how Bowles's work articulates various states of being along the continuum of existential insecurity, and she examines his negative romanticism, his fascination with primitive landscapes, and his belief that the imagination is perfect without intervention and corruption from civilization andits institutions. The author of The Sheltering Sky, one of the very few fully realized expressions of American existentialism, has lived the philosophy he writes about. Only a book that analyzes Bowles's emotional life in conjunction with his cultural and intellectual reality will be able to explain the complexities of his work. This is such a book. Gena Dagel Caponi teaches cultural and intellectual history and is the acting director of American Studies at the University of Texas, San Antonio.
- Contents:
- A spontaneous life
- Existential fiction: The sheltering sky and Let it come down
- Postcolonial fiction: The spider's house and short stories
- Detective fiction: short stories and Up above the world
- Surrealism and extraordinary consciousness
- Travel writing and historical fiction: Their heads are green and their hands are blue and Points in time
- Unwelcome words and other late works.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 137-146) and index.
- Local Notes:
- Gotham Book Mart Collection copy has dustjacket retained.
- ISBN:
- 0805745602
- OCLC:
- 39380025
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