Genius : a mosaic of one hundred exemplary creative minds / Harold Bloom
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: London : Fourth Estate, 2002.Description: xviii, 814p. : ill. ; 24cmISBN:- 1841153982
- 22 153.98 BLO
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | MCHV Library | 153.98 BLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | HV3989 |
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153.44 PEI The intuitive way : a guide to living from inner wisdom / | 153.8 KRI The ending of time / | 153.9 PIA The psychology of intelligence / | 153.98 BLO Genius : a mosaic of one hundred exemplary creative minds / | 154 JUN Man and his symbols / | 154 MOL The unconscious / | 154.2 MUR The power of your subconscious mind / |
From the Bible to Ralph Ellison, America's most prominent and bestselling literary critic takes an enlightening look at the concept of genius through the ages in a celebration of the greatest creative writers of all time.
With The Western Canon, Yale-based critical eminence Bloom tapped into a strain of the cultural zeitgeist looking for authoritative takes on what to read. Bloom here follows up with 6–10 pages each on 100 "geniuses" of literature (all deceased)—pointing to the major works, outlining the major achievements therein, showing us how to recognize them for ourselves. Despite the book's length, Bloom's mostly male geniuses are, as he notes "certainly not 'the top one hundred' in anyone's judgement, my own included. I wanted to write about these." Bloom backs up his choices with such effortless and engaging erudition that their idiosyncrasy and casualness become strengths. While organized under the rubric of the 10 Kabalistic Sefirot, "attributes at once of God and of Adam Kadmon or Divine Man, God's Image," Bloom's chosen figures are associated by his own brilliant (and sometimes jabbingly provocative) forms of attention, from a linkage of Dr. Johnson, Goethe and Freud to one of Dickens, Celan and Ellison (with a few others in between them). A pleasant surprise is the plethora of lesser-known Latin American authors, from Luz Vaz de Camões to José Maria Eça de Queiroz and Alejo Carpentier. Many familiar greats are here, too, as is a definition of genius. "This book is not a work of analysis or of close reading, but of surmise and juxtaposition," Bloom writes, and as such readers will find it appropriately enthusiastic and wild.
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