Firsthand: How I Solved a Literary Mystery and Learned to Play Kickass Tennis while Coming to Grips with the Disorder of Things: Writers On Writing
Autor Keith Gandalen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 iul 2024
Keith Gandal combines this scholarly detective story with a comic personal narrative about how a midlife crisis accidentally sent him on a journey to write a research monograph that many in his profession—including at times himself—were dubious about. While researching how Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Faulkner faced their forgotten crises of masculinity, Gandal discovers that his own crisis is instrumental to his creative process. Incorporating stories from Gandal’s comic romp through the hyper-competitive world of middle-aged men’s tennis, adopting pitbulls, and discussing Michel Foucault, Firsthand gives readers an inside look at how to acquire accurate knowledge—about the world, about history, and about oneself.
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
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Paperback (1) | 134.98 lei 22-36 zile | |
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS – 23 iul 2024 | 134.98 lei 22-36 zile | |
Hardback (1) | 350.47 lei 22-36 zile | |
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS – 23 iul 2024 | 350.47 lei 22-36 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780472056958
ISBN-10: 0472056956
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
Seria Writers On Writing
ISBN-10: 0472056956
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
Seria Writers On Writing
Notă biografică
Keith Gandal is Professor of English with a Joint Appointment in American Studies and Creative Writing at The City College of New York.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Author’s Note and Disclaimer
Prologue: June 26, 1984: Truth is the Widow
Part I. An Authentic Mystery
1. 21 Years Later: My Fathers’ Ghosts
2. My Better Half
3. Scholarly Detective Story I: Noticing Anomalies in the Lit-Crit Paradigm
4. Guns, Guard Dogs, and Yoga
Part II. Pretty Ugly Rivalries
5. Midlife Athletic Crisis
6. Scholarly Detective Story II: Identifying the Literary Mysteries To Be Solved
7. Secondhand Existence
8. Scholarly Detective Story III: Finding Clues in the Literature
9. A Farewell to Love Handles
10. Meetings with Unbearable Men
11. Scholarly Detective Story IV: Discovering Primary-Source Historical Evidence (in My Wife’s File Cabinet)
Part III. Fear and Doubting
12. The Spleen of Tennis
13. Early-Life Crisis, 1968, Age 8
14. Scholarship Lessons, 1983: Wednesdays with Michel (Foucault)
15. Professional Blunder, Berkeley, 1986.
16. Paralysis on the Court
Part IV. The Lost-Out Generation
17. Scholarly Detective Story V: Hypothesizing Historical Revision and Searching for Proof
18. “Hitter’s Block”
19. Why I Didn’t Die at Age 8
20. Scholarly Detective Story VI: Examining the Historical Revision: Analyzing Discrepancies between Accepted Histories and New Evidence
21. Is Zen for Real, or a Con?
22. Smashing Through the Looking Glass
23. Scholarly Detective Story VI, continued: The Army’s “Inconsistent” Policy on Minorities
24. Zen, Then Not Zen
25. Scholarly Detective Story VII: The New Literary-Historical Synthesis
Part V. The Mysterious Zone
26. The Big Wait
27. My First Official Tournament as a Grown Man
28. Going Outside My Familiar Discomfort Zone
29. The Much-Needed Zen Master Doesn't Appear
Part VI. Some Provisional Answers
30. Scholarly Detective Story VIII: Postscript: Seeing the Vietnam Era in Historical Context
31. Seeing Myself in Historical Context, Military History Convention, Ogden, Utah
32. A Zen Master in Wrigleyville?
33. Playing Tennis against Pilots and Matadors
34. Sweeping Myself Clean
35. Jekyll and the Dragon
36. Coming Back to What We Love
Epilogue
Bibliography
Author’s Note and Disclaimer
Prologue: June 26, 1984: Truth is the Widow
Part I. An Authentic Mystery
1. 21 Years Later: My Fathers’ Ghosts
2. My Better Half
3. Scholarly Detective Story I: Noticing Anomalies in the Lit-Crit Paradigm
4. Guns, Guard Dogs, and Yoga
Part II. Pretty Ugly Rivalries
5. Midlife Athletic Crisis
6. Scholarly Detective Story II: Identifying the Literary Mysteries To Be Solved
7. Secondhand Existence
8. Scholarly Detective Story III: Finding Clues in the Literature
9. A Farewell to Love Handles
10. Meetings with Unbearable Men
11. Scholarly Detective Story IV: Discovering Primary-Source Historical Evidence (in My Wife’s File Cabinet)
Part III. Fear and Doubting
12. The Spleen of Tennis
13. Early-Life Crisis, 1968, Age 8
14. Scholarship Lessons, 1983: Wednesdays with Michel (Foucault)
15. Professional Blunder, Berkeley, 1986.
16. Paralysis on the Court
Part IV. The Lost-Out Generation
17. Scholarly Detective Story V: Hypothesizing Historical Revision and Searching for Proof
18. “Hitter’s Block”
19. Why I Didn’t Die at Age 8
20. Scholarly Detective Story VI: Examining the Historical Revision: Analyzing Discrepancies between Accepted Histories and New Evidence
21. Is Zen for Real, or a Con?
22. Smashing Through the Looking Glass
23. Scholarly Detective Story VI, continued: The Army’s “Inconsistent” Policy on Minorities
24. Zen, Then Not Zen
25. Scholarly Detective Story VII: The New Literary-Historical Synthesis
Part V. The Mysterious Zone
26. The Big Wait
27. My First Official Tournament as a Grown Man
28. Going Outside My Familiar Discomfort Zone
29. The Much-Needed Zen Master Doesn't Appear
Part VI. Some Provisional Answers
30. Scholarly Detective Story VIII: Postscript: Seeing the Vietnam Era in Historical Context
31. Seeing Myself in Historical Context, Military History Convention, Ogden, Utah
32. A Zen Master in Wrigleyville?
33. Playing Tennis against Pilots and Matadors
34. Sweeping Myself Clean
35. Jekyll and the Dragon
36. Coming Back to What We Love
Epilogue
Bibliography
Recenzii
“Gandal vividly captures the emotions he experienced during a difficult research and writing project. An excellent read full of humor and intellectual and emotional depth. Anyone who is a writer or a want-to-be writer will appreciate this book.”
“This is a remarkable book. If the reader can survive having their consciousness deconstructed in the first few chapters, then they can settle in to enjoy every word. Truly original. The persona of the narrator resonates with an American tradition of the paranoid, ironic, self-reflexive voice. Is this academic memoir, detective fiction, cultural history, or comic novel? Actually it is all of these.”
“A fascinating ‘whodunit’ by a writer tracking other writers―and himself―through the labyrinth of the writing life, Firsthand gives us an entirely new, continually surprising perspective on the scholar’s vocation.”
“If you can only read one book this season about Michel Foucault, the Lost Generation writers, the mobilization of American troops during World War I, the mid-life crisis of a male academic, getting new pets, and the mendacious world of amateur tennis, make this the one. Keith Gandal’s memoir traces his own journey to make the subtle but necessary psychic shifts on the road to uncovering truths hidden in plain sight—about other writers, scholars and himself. It is all told in an engaging, headlong pace that reaches a memorable climax. I couldn’t put it down.”
"Of special relevance to readers with an interest in research writing, and descriptively insightful writers-on-writing biographies and memoirs, Keith Gandal's Firsthand is an especially and unreservedly recommended pick for community and college/university library Author Memoir and Writing Reference collections."
“This is a remarkable book. If the reader can survive having their consciousness deconstructed in the first few chapters, then they can settle in to enjoy every word. Truly original. The persona of the narrator resonates with an American tradition of the paranoid, ironic, self-reflexive voice. Is this academic memoir, detective fiction, cultural history, or comic novel? Actually it is all of these.”
“A fascinating ‘whodunit’ by a writer tracking other writers―and himself―through the labyrinth of the writing life, Firsthand gives us an entirely new, continually surprising perspective on the scholar’s vocation.”
“If you can only read one book this season about Michel Foucault, the Lost Generation writers, the mobilization of American troops during World War I, the mid-life crisis of a male academic, getting new pets, and the mendacious world of amateur tennis, make this the one. Keith Gandal’s memoir traces his own journey to make the subtle but necessary psychic shifts on the road to uncovering truths hidden in plain sight—about other writers, scholars and himself. It is all told in an engaging, headlong pace that reaches a memorable climax. I couldn’t put it down.”
"Of special relevance to readers with an interest in research writing, and descriptively insightful writers-on-writing biographies and memoirs, Keith Gandal's Firsthand is an especially and unreservedly recommended pick for community and college/university library Author Memoir and Writing Reference collections."
Descriere
On writing, researching, and tennis