Tennessee Williams's the Glass Menagerie / Edition 2

Tennessee Williams's the Glass Menagerie / Edition 2

by Harold Bloom
ISBN-10:
0791093492
ISBN-13:
9780791093498
Pub. Date:
05/28/2008
Publisher:
Blooms Literary Criticism
ISBN-10:
0791093492
ISBN-13:
9780791093498
Pub. Date:
05/28/2008
Publisher:
Blooms Literary Criticism
Tennessee Williams's the Glass Menagerie / Edition 2

Tennessee Williams's the Glass Menagerie / Edition 2

by Harold Bloom

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Overview

Premiering in 1944, The Glass Menagerie was Tennessee Williams's first popular success. Today the play is considered one of Williams's masterpieces and is frequently performed. This updated volume is an essential resource for those seeking to deepen their appreciation of this fascinating character study.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780791093498
Publisher: Blooms Literary Criticism
Publication date: 05/28/2008
Series: Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations Series
Edition description: REV
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.50(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 14 Years

About the Author

About The Author
"Authentic literature doesn't divide us," the scholar and literary critic Harold Bloom once said. "It addresses itself to the solitary individual or consciousness." Revered and sometimes reviled as a champion of the Western canon, Bloom insists on the importance of reading authors such as Shakespeare, Milton, and Chaucer -- not because they transmit certain approved cultural values, but because they transcend the limits of culture, and thus enlarge rather than constrict our sense of what it means to be human. As Bloom explained in an interview, "Shakespeare is the true multicultural author. He exists in all languages. He is put on the stage everywhere. Everyone feels that they are represented by him on the stage."

Bloom began his career by tackling the formidable legacy of T.S. Eliot, who had dismissed the English Romantic poets as undisciplined nature-worshippers. Bloom construed the Romantic poets' visions of immortality as rebellions against nature, and argued that an essentially Romantic imagination was still at work in the best modernist poets.

Having restored the Romantics to critical respectability, Bloom advanced a more general theory of poetry. His now-famous The Anxiety of Influence argued that any strong poem is a creative "misreading" of the poet's predecessor. The book raised, as the poet John Hollander wrote, "profound questions about... how the prior visions of other poems are, for a true poet, as powerful as his own dreams and as formative as his domestic childhood." In addition to developing this theory, Bloom wrote several books on sacred texts. In The Book of J, he suggested that some of the oldest parts of the Bible were written by a woman.

The Book of J was a bestseller, but it was the 1994 publication of The Western Canon that made the critic-scholar a household name. In it, Bloom decried what he called the "School of Resentment" and the use of political correctness as a basis for judging works of literature. His defense of the threatened canon formed, according to The New York Times, a "passionate demonstration of why some writers have triumphantly escaped the oblivion in which time buries almost all human effort."

Bloom placed Shakespeare along with Dante at the center of the Western canon, and he made another defense of Shakespeare's centrality with Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human, an illuminating study of Shakespeare's plays. How to Read and Why (2000) revisited Shakespeare and other writers in the Bloom pantheon, and described the act of reading as both a spiritual exercise and an aesthetic pleasure.

Recently, Bloom took up another controversial stance when he attacked Harry Potter in an essay for The Wall Street Journal. His 2001 book Stories and Poems for Extremely Intelligent Children of All Ages advanced an alternative to contemporary children's lit, with a collection of classic works of literature "worthy of rereading" by people of all ages.

The poet and editor David Lehman said that "while there are some critics who are known for a certain subtlety and a certain judiciousness, there are other critics... who radiate ferocious passion." Harold Bloom is a ferociously passionate reader for whom literary criticism is, as he puts it, "the art of making what is implicit in the text as finely explicit as possible."

Hometown:

New York, New York and New Haven, Connecticut

Date of Birth:

July 11, 1930

Place of Birth:

New York, New York

Education:

B.A., Cornell University, 1951; Ph.D., Yale University, 1955

Table of Contents


Editor's Note     vii
Introduction   Harold Bloom     1
The Glass Menagerie   Nancy M. Tischler     5
Tennessee Williams, Theatre Poet in Prose   Frank Durham     23
The Glass Menagerie: "It's no tragedy, Freckles."   Thomas E. Scheye     37
The Composition of The Glass Menagerie: An Argument for Complexity   Brian Parker     43
'The Glass Menagerie' (1944)   Roger Boxill     59
"More than Just a Little Chekhovian": The Sea Gull as a Source for the Characters in The Glass Menagerie   Drewey Wayne Gunn     69
Entering The Glass Menagerie   C. W. E. Bigsby     79
"Where Memory Begins": New Texas Light-on The Glass Menagerie   Gilbert Debusscher     95
The Blue Rose of St. Louis: Laura, Romanticism, and The Glass Menagerie   Bert Cardullo     105
Tennessee Williams's Tom Wingfield and Georg Kaiser's Cashier: A Contextual Comparison   William Fordyce     117
Flying the Jolly Roger: Images of Escape and Selfhood in Tennessee Williams's The Glass Menagerie   Lori Leathers Single     135
Chronology     153
Contributors     161
Bibliography     165
Acknowledgments     169
Index     171
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