A Feat of Strength in "Ithaca": Eugen Sandow and Physical Culture in Joyce's "Ulysses."Published in:2006By:Plock, Vike MartinaPublication type:Literary Criticism
"Insatiable as Good Old America": "Tough Guys Don't Dance" and Popular Criminality.Published in:2006By:Ryan, James EmmettPublication type:Literary Criticism
"The Gospel According to the Son" and Christian Belief.Published in:2006By:Partridge, Jeffrey F. L.Publication type:Literary Criticism
Norman Mailer: Novelist, Journalist, or Historian?Published in:Journal of Modern Literature, 2006, v. 30, n. 1, p. 91, doi. 10.2979/JML.2006.30.1.91By:Lennon, J. MichaelPublication type:Article
Plexed Artistry: The Formal Case for Mailer's "Harlot's Ghost."Published in:2006By:Rampton, DavidPublication type:Literary Criticism
Shaping the National Voice: Poetry of WWI.Published in:2006By:Lusty, HeatherPublication type:Book Review
Papas' Baby: Impossible Paternity in "Going to Meet the Man."Published in:2006By:Brim, MattPublication type:Literary Criticism
Mid-Term Autobiography and the Second World War.Published in:2006By:Bolton, JonathanPublication type:Essay
Automobility and Lyric Poetry: The Mobile Gaze in William Carlos Williams' "The Right of Way."Published in:2006By:Chatlos, JonPublication type:Essay
"Perpetuating the Language": Romantic Tradition, the Genre Function, and the Origins of the Trench Lyric.Published in:2006By:Clausson, NilsPublication type:Literary Criticism
Mailer Again: Heterophobia in "Tough Guys Don't Dance."Published in:2006By:Howley, AshtonPublication type:Literary Criticism
Post-Holocaust Theodicy, American Imperialism, and the "very Jewish Jesus" of Norman Mailer's "The Gospel According to the Son."Published in:2006By:McDonald, BrianPublication type:Essay
The Karma of Words: Mailer since "Executioner's Song."Published in:2006By:Whalen-Bridge, JohnPublication type:Interview
The Addiction of Masculinity: Norman Mailer's "Tough Guys Don't Dance" and the Cultural Politics of Reaganism.Published in:2006By:Duguid, ScottPublication type:Literary Criticism