Writing for The New Yorker
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Fiona Green
About this book
Original critical essays on an iconic American periodical, providing new insights into twentieth-century literary culture
This collection of newly commissioned critical essays reads across and between New Yorker departments, from sports writing to short stories, cartoons to reporters at large, poetry to annals of business. Attending to the relations between these kinds of writing and the magazine’s visual and material constituents, the collection examines the distinctive ways in which imaginative writing has inhabited the ‘prime real estate’ of this enormously influential periodical. In bringing together a range of sharply angled analyses of particular authors, styles, columns, and pages, this book offers multiple perspectives on American writing and periodical culture at specific moments in twentieth-century history.
Key Features:
- Eleven new perspectives on major American writers, including Roth, Cheever, Plath, and Updike, in relation to their first publication contexts
- Reconsiders modern and contemporary American writing and periodical culture, focusing critical attention on commercially successful ‘smart’ magazines
- Draws on new research in The New Yorker’s manuscript and digital archives
- A distinctive combination of close critical reading and cultural analysis
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
v -
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Acknowledgements
vii -
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Abbreviation
ix -
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Notes on Contributors
x -
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Introduction
1 -
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Contributos
1 - I. Magazine and Marketplace
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1. The New Yorker, the Middlebrow, and the Periodical Marketplace in 1925
17 -
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2. ‘We Stand Corrected’: New Yorker Fact-checking and the Business of American Accuracy
36 -
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3. Marianne Moore and the Hidden Persuaders
58 - II Self-Fashioning
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4. Philip Roth’s Kinds of Writing
81 -
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5. Spark’s Proofs
99 -
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6. Sylvia Plath and ‘The Blessed Glossy New Yorker’
118 -
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7. The Distractions of John Cheever
137 - III Lightness and Gravity
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8. Portrait of the Rabbit as a Young Beau: John Updike, New Yorker Humorist
161 -
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9. Sports at The New Yorker
188 -
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10. The New Yorker Life of Hannah Arendt’s Mind
209 -
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11. On Blustering: Dwight Macdonald, Modernism and The New Yorker
228 -
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Index
249