Norman Mailer, a Top American Novelist
By CARL ROLLYSON, Special to the Sun | November 12, 2007
With the passing of Norman Mailer at 84, American literature has lost one of its major voices.
Kathy Willens / AP
Norman Mailer reflects on turning 80 during an interview in his Brooklyn Heights apartment in January 2003.
Mailer, who died Saturday morning at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan of renal failure, catapulted himself into the front ranks of American writers early, with his critically acclaimed and best-selling debut, the war novel "The Naked and the Dead" (1948). "The Armies of the Night" (1968), his account of the march on the Pentagon, won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, and he won another Pulitzer for "The Executioner's Song" (1979), his epic account of murderer Gary Gilmour.
Yet, despite these towering achievements, Mailer never quite achieved the title to which he aspired: Great American Novelist. His bids for that honor — huge novels such as "Ancient Evenings" (1983) and "Harlot's Ghost" (1991) — have great themes but lack the narrative drive, humor, and spontaneity of more modest efforts, such as "Marilyn" (1973) and "The Fight" (1975). Something in Mailer froze up when he deliberately set his sights on literary fame; his prose became elephantine and mannered.
Other writers might not have found this so difficult. After all, Mailer could have probed his family life and Jewish background. But it was precisely that persona, "the nice Jewish boy from Brooklyn," that he was determined to jettison in his frantic muscle building efforts to emulate Hemingway and — even more importantly — Malraux. For Mailer had imbibed the Malraux myth of the writer as man of action, one who places himself at the center of world-shaking events.
However, in the late 1950s, despite his growing reputation as a public personality, Mailer still felt stymied by his devotion to earlier literary models. He needed a break from tradition to find his rhythm and natural register. He helped found the Village Voice in 1955. He tried short fiction, producing a few notable pieces, such as "The Man Who Studied Yoga" and "The Time of Her Time," but the short story form did not really suit his expansive sensibility. Then, out of desperation, Mailer decided to take control by interviewing himself, and making his quest to become a great writer the subject of his writing. He became his own narrator, experiencing a freedom from literary conventions that turned him, Tristram Shandy-like, into a comical yet cunning character the reader could side with. In "Advertisements for Myself" (1959), Mailer kept up a running commentary on excerpts he included from his own fiction and nonfiction, explaining its failures and touting its successes, providing alternative tables of contents that gave readers different ways of approaching his work. The book was wonderful theater.
"The Armies of the Night" led to the apotheosis of the Mailer persona: the swaggering writer swept up in the maelstrom of the march on the Pentagon, the unreliable narrator challenging the unreliability of history, the novelist once again sizing up the talent in the room (notably poet Robert Lowell), but in the guise of a participant in a newsworthy and nation-defining moment. Mailer was writing about war again, but this time he was central to the combat he described; indeed, he embodied the warring sides of the American mind. This masterpiece was the closest Mailer would come to fulfilling the ambition he had announced in "Advertisements for Myself": effecting "a revolution in the consciousness of our time."
But Mailer's inability to produce an incontestable masterpiece after "The Executioner's Song" hurt his reputation — as did continuing attacks from feminist critics. His fraught personal life, as well as his treatment of women in fiction, made certain readers dismiss him out of hand. He seemed a relic of a macho age.
It could be said that Mailer was the last Romantic. He invested figures as diverse as John F. Kennedy and Fidel Castro with a magical aura akin to Thomas Carlyle's worshipful great man theory of history. Mailer liked to put on the gloves, to step in the ring with the likes of Muhammad Ali (the subject of one of Mailer's best books, "The Fight").
Critics often complained that Mailer spent entirely too much time on such public antics. They merely diverted him from writing better novels. But Mailer's life and work suggests otherwise.
In his own mind, he could not be a writer without also being so much more.
Mr. Rollyson is author of "The Lives of Norman Mailer."
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starting off with his beginning life, of where he was born and who he was before he became this great writer.
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Perhaps beginning with his accomplishments before mentioning his renal failure would be another option for the obituary.
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This first paragraph lets you know of Mailer’s life in the brief description covering the highlights of his career and the ending of his life, intriguing the reader into wanting to know the details in between these two great points of a person’s life.
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While I think most obituaries would state his notable work early on, an obituary might be complimentary to the person’s personality and lifestyle rather than just what the person has achieved.
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To state the obvious, the reader is informed of Mailer’s death.
But then the reader encounters the word ‘catapulted’, which I found to be an interesting choice of wording. It gave me a sense that this person might have written about war or been affiliated people/organizations with war. Which then is affirmed by the literary pieces he has written (a war novel, and an account of a war/political event).
‘Catapulted’ also was an interesting choice because of it’s metaphorical use & imagery with the rest of the sentence : catapulted himself into the front ranks of American writers early. To break this down just a bit:
1) In the middle ages, to set up a catapult siege device; the device must be loaded with large objects of significant size/weight. This loading stage gives me a sense that Mailer was famous in American Literature, or held some kind of weight in the community.
2) After the catapult device is loaded, it is then aimed and hurled towards it’s target at an extreme unrelenting speed and vigor. Till it reaches it’s target and leaves an impact on the target. This second part served as a metaphor for Mailer’s awards for his work. It also works with imagery/metaphorically for how he “catapulted himself into the front ranks of American writers early”. This statement captures the raw impact of what Mailer has done for American Literature as he is put into attention of “the front ranks of American Literature”.
I am content with this opening, however I would like to know more about his personality. Or is it the act of catapulting himself symbolic of his nature to want to make an impact on the world?
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One other beginning I could picture for this obituary was maybe providing a quote by Normal Miller that would then tie into his legacy and what a loss it is to lose such a prolific novelist.
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This first section tells you of Mailer’s life in the brief depiction covering the highlights of his vocation and the consummation of his life, captivating the peruser into needing to know the subtle elements in the middle of these two extraordinary purposes of a man’s life.
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Elephantine prose being the use of large vocabulary and mannered prose being the way of speaking or writing in a precise or essential way.
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the question made me think of this phrase. He also tried to run away from his BK Jewish origins while at the same time placing himself in his work conspicuously trying to place himself in the ranks of masculine literary figures like Hemingway.
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His works becoming elephantine seems to mean clumsy but could also mean sloppy, and mannered would anticipate tense or overcooked for the type of literary writing he was hoping to achieve.
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By the structure of this paragraph, I think the statement of his prose becoming “elephantine and mannered” explains that he had good intentions with his prose but he made poor choices as noted by “froze up”.
This paragraph gave me a sense that after his success his ego of now successful novelist, his prose must be of a higher quality in literary language, but it ended up sounding too grandiose for his personality.New Conversation
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Artists like Philip Roth, Jonathan Ames, Leonard Cohen, and even Woody Allen, to an extent,all tend toward sexuality in their writings as a way of escaping “the nice Jewish boy” upbringing.
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Look up a description of the novel if necessary
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Thistram Shady was a similar character in a fictional novel who wrote books from his memories of his family history topped with many opinions and little actual detail which was similar to what Mailer was doing by using himself as the subject of his own writing.
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This poem is in reference to the dark and comfortless place the world can become when you are put in the battlefield at night, fighting both enemy and friend, pure chaos
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Ernest Hemigway would fit under the description of the macho age writer. This phrase refers to a masculinity, an age where male writers prevailed.
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I agree that Hemingway would also be considered a macho age writer, but I think it’s about more than just coming out on top over women in writing. The macho age writer would demonstrate his masculinity in all areas of his life, including his personal life, his hobbies, and his general attitude. Hemingway, for example, demonstrated his masculinity in his every day speech, in the anecdotes and stories he told, and in his hobby as a hunter.
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In this context it also suggests that Mailer was rather pro male dominance in a social context as well as his writings which would also explain the phrase macho age
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Hemingway’s gift was the way he brought out the dignity in his characters and in his voice. Despite his being an athletic and masculine voice, it is also an honest and vulnerable voice. The women in his stories are dignified, brave and adult. a finesse not all writers possess.
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I’m sure some of that aggression carried over into his writing potentially leading women away from it.
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Both in everyday life and in writing, this type of person is separating themselves from ideas that could be considered elitist. Also, Mailer’s obvious view of females in his position show that he viewed his masculinity as something that made him better.
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A theme in the piece is Mailer’s personal vs, professional side. Did Mailer seek to inject himself into the narrative of his works, or was this more a creation of his critics? In other words did he self-promote and use the media to his advantage.
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It’s clear that both Mailer and Hemingway seek to capture this masculinity in their writings since it was a clear reflection of their own personas and life. It would not surprise me if Mailer became a similar figure to the macho one portrayed in Lillian Ross’ ‘Portrait of Hemingway’
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The effect of the author using this sort of redundancy is to extend what he is trying to say. It is normally unnecessary for a writer to place this kind of beginning to a paragraph. Maybe this was some sort of way for the writer to make the reader see that Norman Mailer was seen to be one of the last Romantics.
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This phrase could have been used because the author didn’t necessarily agree with the fact that Mailer was the last Romantic, or simply because there is no exact way to see for sure who was the exact last Romantic and it is all up for personal opinion/discussion.
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The Last Romantic is a competitive title, many would protest to Mailer being the reigning “Last…”
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“It could be said” lets the reader agree or disagree with the statement without offending a person who may think otherwise. I believe it is important to not polarize the reader by disrespecting [in the reader’s eyes] the person the obituary is for.
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The phrase “it could be said” is used to express the opinions of Mailer by some people. It is not a definite fact that Mailer was the last Romantic. Some could even disagree and claim he wasn’t a Romantic at all.
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“Critics often complained that Mailer wasted his time doing things that he has no business doing rather than focusing on what he does best …”
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Basically what I’m trying to say is that because it is an obituary, it looks at the negatives with a positive perspective. If it wasn’t an obituary, it would have continued to stay in the tone of the 12th paragraph, more critical.
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The last sentence of the article is saying that Mailer believed that the person he was outside of his writing played an important role in his work. He believed that he had to lead a life outside of his career and be a person apart from being just a writer. His “separate lives” were not really separate at all, but complements of each other.
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The use of “so much more” leaves this open view in my mind. It makes me think that Mailer had a tremendous amount to offer, and his critics misunderstood him.
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So many writers spend much of their lives inside a room. Mailer wanted to be well known during his lifetime and make history by having an exciting and engaging life.
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I can relate with this sentence as I am a person who values creative pursuits. I feel that even though I channel my artistic and creative efforts into writing ; I feel like I cannot be the writer I am without the other stakes I am making in my other creative pursuits in culinary and craft. From the article, you learn that Mailer had put time and effort into non-writing efforts, and not doing particularly well. However this last gnomish sentence ends on a satisfying and respectful node to Mailer’s thoughts. In the end, it is not to our judgement, as for Mailer was satisfied that he made an impact outside of his literary works.
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might feel as if he left behind a substaintial legacy.
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However, if not written well, they won’t do justice to someone’s life. I believe writing your own obituary would be the most compelling than if someone else writes it for you, but sometimes you need that outside perspective. Overall, the disadvantage is misconstruing someone’s life and not getting their successes and failures across to the reader.
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Also the deceased cannot dispute any wrong information.
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or impression they made during their time here; whether it be on a particular industry, the lives of others, and/or their own personal journey. Also, one’s achievements are often viewed differently after they die. This would be interesting to include in a biography and can be very artistically revealing.
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