The Death of Avant-Garde Literature
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"no writer can have the rewards of a [[book-club]] adoption and of [[alienation]] at the same time" | "no writer can have the rewards of a [[book-club]] adoption and of [[alienation]] at the same time" | ||
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+ | "... Leslie Fiedler's in “[[The Death of Avant-Garde Literature]]” (1964), [[James Ackerman]]'s in “[[The Demise of the Avant-Garde]]” (1969), and [[Irving Howe]]'s in “The Idea ."--''[[The New York School Poets and the Neo-Avant-Garde]]'' (2016) by [[Mark Silverberg]] | ||
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Revision as of 12:47, 25 March 2020
"But the literature major and his wife, along with the second generation literature majors who are their children, constitute the ..." "no writer can have the rewards of a book-club adoption and of alienation at the same time" "... Leslie Fiedler's in “The Death of Avant-Garde Literature” (1964), James Ackerman's in “The Demise of the Avant-Garde” (1969), and Irving Howe's in “The Idea ."--The New York School Poets and the Neo-Avant-Garde (2016) by Mark Silverberg |
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"The Death of Avant-Garde Literature" (1964) is an essay by Leslie Fiedler first published in the New York Herald Tribune Magazine, May 17, 1964.
See also
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