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Immediate Experience: Movies, Comics, Theatre, and Other Aspects of Popular Culture (Enlarged)

Contributor(s): Warshow, Robert (Author), Trilling, Lionel (Introduction by), Cavell, Stanley (Epilogue by)

ISBN: 9780674007260

Publisher: Harvard University Press

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$37.00
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Pub Date: January 30, 2002

Dewey: 791.430973

LCCN: 2001039782

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Price on Product, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.03" H x 8.40" L x 5.48" W ( 0.95 lbs) 352 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

This collection of essays, which originally appeared as a book in 1962, is virtually the complete works of an editor of Commentary magazine who died, at age 37, in 1955. Long before the rise of Cultural Studies as an academic pursuit, in the pages of the best literary magazines of the day, Robert Warshow wrote analyses of the folklore of modern life that were as sensitive and penetrating as the writings of James Agee, George Orwell, and Walter Benjamin. Some of these essays--notably "The Westerner," "The Gangster as Tragic Hero," and the pieces on the New Yorker, Mad Magazine, Arthur Miller's The Crucible, and the Rosenberg letters--are classics, once frequently anthologized but now hard to find.

Along with a new preface by Stanley Cavell, The Immediate Experience includes several essays not previously published in the book--on Kafka and Hemingway--as well as Warshow's side of an exchange with Irving Howe.

Brief description: Robert Warshow (1917-1955) was a member of the community that has come to be known as the "New York Intellectuals." He was an editor of Commentary magazine and an astute critic of cinema. He tragically died of a heart-attack at the age of 37.

Review Quotes: A legendary little book, partly because its author died at the age of 37, but mostly because it stands as a virtually unique representative from its period of a consistently open-minded, moral, aesthetic, and political engagement with commercial culture.--Louis Menand

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