William Styron's Sophie's choice : crime and self-punishment
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
William Styron's Sophie's choice : crime and self-punishment
University Press of America, c2002
- : pbk.
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Note
Bibliographical references: p. [123]-124
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Although Sophie's Choice by William Styron won the American Book Award for fiction, it met with some very mixed reviews. Some critics regarded the novel as bombastic and melodramatic-in short, a colossal failure. In William Styron's "Sophie's Choice," Rhoda Sirlin demonstrates that Sophie's Choice is Styron's most audacious, original, and artistically successful novel to date. First, this book will counter the many critics who have assailed the novel as anti-Semitic. Sirlin then counters the argument that Sophie's Choice is a sexist novel and that Styron and his youthful alter ego, Stingo, are misogynists. Finally, Sirlin explores the novel's powerful theme-absolute evil, showing that while insisting on the power and inextinguishability of evil in human beings and nature, Styron ultimately provides a compassionate vision of humanity struggling for meaning in an indifferent universe. Through this examination, Sirlin shows that Styron must be appreciated as one of the most audacious and humane voices in contemporary literature.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Foreword Chapter 2 Acknowledgments Chapter 3 Introduction Chapter 4 Against Sacred Silences: Holocaust Fiction and Anti-Semitism Chapter 5 Sex in Mid-Century America: "A Nightmarish Sargasso Sea of Guilts and Apprehension" Chapter 6 Sophie's Choice: An American Voyage into the Mystery of Iniquity Chapter 7 Conclusion Chapter 8 Appendix: A Conversation with William Styron Chapter 9 Works Cited Chapter 10 Index
by "Nielsen BookData"