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    Let Us Now Praise Famous Men: Three Tenant Families

    Let Us Now Praise Famous Men: Three Tenant Families

    agrandir agrandir 
    Auteur: James Agee
    Créateurs: Walker Evans, James Agee
    Éditeur: Mariner Books

    Acheter Neuf: EUR 18,90

    Quantité 1 Disponible


    Neuf (3) D'occasion (4) de EUR 11,05

    Classement parmi les ventes: 5953

    Média: Broche
    Édition: 1st Mariner Books Ed
    Pages: 432
    Poids (kg): 1.8
    Dimension (cm): 9 x 6.4 x 1.3

    ISBN: 0618127496
    Code Décimal Dewey: 976.1
    CUP: 046442127493
    EAN: 9780618127498
    ASIN: 0618127496

    Date de publication: Décembre 12, 2001
    Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres
    Expédition: Livraison internationale disponible
    Condition: Votre commande vous sera envoyee des Etats-Unis. Veuillez compter 14 a 24 jours ouvres pour la livraison en France. Si vous souhaitez nous repondre par mail, l'anglais est prefere, mais n'est pas obligatoire.

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    Revues éditoriales:

    Amazon.com
    Just what kind of book is Let Us Now Praise Famous Men? It contains many things: poems; confessional reveries; disquisitions on the proper way to listen to Beethoven; snippets of dialogue, both real and imagined; a lengthy response to a survey from the Partisan Review; exhaustive catalogs of furniture, clothing, objects, and smells. And then there are Walker Evans's famously stark portraits of depression-era sharecroppers--photographs that both stand apart from and reinforce James Agee's words.

    Assigned to do a story for Fortune magazine about sharecroppers in the Deep South, Agee and Evans spent four weeks living with a poor white tenant family, winning the Burroughs's trust and immersing themselves in a sharecropper's daily existence. Given a first draft of the resulting article, the editors at Fortune quite understandably threw up their hands--as did several other editors who subsequently worked with a later book-length manuscript. The writing was contrary. It refused to accommodate itself to the reader, and at times it positively bristled with hostility. (What other book could take Marx as the epigraph and then announce: "These words are quoted here to mislead those who will be misled by them"?) Response to the book was puzzled or unfriendly, and Let Us Now Praise Famous Men sputtered out of print only a few short years after its publication. It took the 1960s, and a vogue for social justice, to bring Agee's masterwork the audience it deserved.

    Yet the book is far more interesting--aesthetically and morally--than the sort of guilty-liberal tract for which it is often mistaken. On an existential level, Agee's text is a deeply felt examination of what it means to suffer, to struggle to live in spite of suffering. On a personal level, it is the painful, beautifully written portrait of one man's obsession. In its collaboration with Evans's photographs, the book is also a groundbreaking experiment in form. In the end, however, it is more than merely the sum of its parts. Let Us Now Praise Famous Men is, quite simply, a book unlike any other, simmering with anger and beauty and mystery. --Mary Park

    Quantité 1 Disponible


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