Margins
Fine Meshwork book cover
Fine Meshwork
Philip Roth, Edna O'Brien, and Jewish-Irish Literature
2019
First Published
312
Number of Pages

Part of Series

In a 1984 interview with longtime friend Edna O’Brien, Philip Roth describes her writing as “a piece of fine meshwork, a net of perfectly observed sensuous details that enables you to contain all the longing and pain and remorse that surge through the fiction.” The phrase “fine meshwork” can apply not only to O’Brien’s writing but also to the connective threads that bind her work to others’, including, most illuminatingly, Roth’s. Since the publication of their first controversial novels in the 1950s and 1960s, Roth and O’Brien have always argued against the isolation of mind from body, autobiography from fiction, life from art, and self from nation. In Fine Meshwork, Dan O’Brien investigates the shared concerns of these two authors, now regarded as literary icons in their home countries. He traces their fifty-year literary friendship and the striking parallels in their books and reception, bringing together what, at first glance, seem to be quite disparate the largely feminist and Irish scholarship on O’Brien with Jewish and American perspectives on Roth. In doing so, and in considering them in a transnational context, he argues that the intertwined nature of their writing symbolizes the far-ranging symbiosis between Irish literature and its American—particularly Jewish American—counterpart.

Author

Dan O'Brien
Author · 1 books

Librarian note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name This profile may contain books from multiple authors of this name - fiction writer ^2 - theatrical ^3 - athlete ^4 - philosphy ^5 - economist ^6 - education ^7 - mid-west biologist ^8

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