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-Great Cultural Revolution
If Norman Mailer can be cancelled, no one is safe
2022-01-11
By Tim Black

[SpikedOnline] Norman Mailer (1923-2007) was a giant of 20th-century American literature. He was a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, responsible for such classics as The Naked and the Dead. And he pioneered a new style of journalism, which revelled in and foregrounded the subjective experience and feelings of the writer. Yet none of that seems to matter to his long-time publisher, Penguin Random House, which has effectively just cancelled him.

Mailer was no stranger to controversy and criticism when alive, of course. The great historian and social critic, Christopher Lasch, saw an archetypally modern narcissism at work in Mailer’s self-revelatory prose. And feminists damned him for his opposition to contraception and his posturing machismo, a charge that acquired a darker resonance after he stabbed his wife Adele Morales with a penknife for mocking his masculinity. (Morales survived and Mailer served three years on probation.)

Yet none of his contemporaries would have dreamed of calling for Mailer’s cancellation. For good or ill, he was a truly significant cultural figure. He was a writer who not only bore witness to his age but helped shape it, too, co-founding the Village Voice in 1955, and capturing the ‘hip’, ‘beat’ and aggressively countercultural spirit of his time. He may have irked some, and he may have inspired others. But both his critics and his champions were united in recognising his importance.
Read the rest at the link
Posted by:badanov

#3  OR, his portfoli was given to a virtue-signaller who doesn't care about the bottom line more than signalling. The same type asshat that gives a huge book advance to a Dem Pol who will sell 2000 copies
Posted by: Frank G   2022-01-11 07:25  

#2  ...I suspect Penguin Random House's thinking is this: he's dead, he was talented but he was also a colossal, nay, Biblical-level asshat, and we don't sell enough of his stuff anymore to be worth the heartburn.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2022-01-11 06:58  

#1  'Naked and the Dead' was right good, but I don't remember anything else I ever read of his.
Posted by: Glenmore   2022-01-11 01:27  

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