community
directory
books
authors
images
encyclopedia

Email:
Password:
Register

Knowledgerush Search

 

Google
  Web knowledgerush


Search for images of Saul Bellow


Message boards   Post comment

Saul Bellow

Saul Bellow (born June 10, 1915), acclaimed North American-Jewish writer, won the Nobel prize for literature in 1976 and is best known for writing novels which investigate isolation, spiritual dissociation and the possibilities of human awakening. While on a Guggenheim fellowship in Paris, he wrote most of his best-known novel, The Adventures of Augie March.

After his parents emigrated from St. Petersburg, he was born in Lachine, Quebec and then schooled in the United States. Bellow has taught at the University of Minnesota, New York University, Princeton, the University of Chicago and Boston University. He currently is a professor of English at Boston University.

Interestingly enough, he received his undergraduate degree not in English, but in Anthropology at the University of Chicago. It seems the study of Anthropology has had an interesting influence on his literary style.

Although not as widely acclaimed as some of his novels, Bellow's later works include the powerful and extraordinarily well-crafted collection of short stories entitled Him with His Foot in His Mouth. Bellow's story lines are led by the personal quests and crises of his protagonists rather than by action. Our introduction to a Bellow protagonist is often at a point of deep crisis in the character's life. Whether romantic, financial or sparked by other causes, the turmoil experienced by a typical Bellow protagonist leads to deep existential questioning. Bellow artfully manages to reference the teachings of great philosophers and thinkers within many of his novels, usually without damaging their readibility or disrupting story flow. One terrific example of this technique is seen within Mr. Sammler's Planet, Bellow's novel about a curmudgeonly Holocaust survivor living in New York City amid the cultural revolution of the 1960s.

Novels:

  • Dangling Man (1944)
  • The Victim (1947)
  • The Adventures of Augie March (1953)
  • Seize the Day (1956)
  • Henderson the Rain King (1959)
  • Herzog (1964)
  • Mr. Sammler's Planet (1970)
  • Humboldt's Gift (1975), won the 1976 Pulitzer Prize in fiction
  • The Dean's December (1982)
  • More Die of Heartbreak(1987)
  • A Theft (1989)
  • The Bellarosa Connection (1989)
  • Ravelstein (2000)

Essays:

  • It All Adds Up
  • To Jerusalem and Back (1976)

Referenced By

10 July | 10 June | 10th July | 10th June | 1944 in literature | 1953 in literature | 1956 in literature | 1959 in literature | 1964 in literature | 1970s | 1975 in literature | 1976 | 1976 in literature | Allan Bloom | Autobiographical novel | Biographical Listing/BE | Chcago | Chicago | Chicago, Illinois | Chicago, USA | Chicago Illinois | Delmore Schwartz | Federal Writers' Project | Granta | Herzog | July 10 | July 10th | June 10 | June 10th | Just Like That | Leo Strauss | List of Famous Jews | List of Jews | List of anti-heroes | List of books by title: A | List of books by title: H | List of books by title: S | List of books by title: T | List of noted Jews | List of novelists by country: United States | List of novelists from the United States | List of people by name: BE | List of years in literature | Listing of noted Jews | Losers in literature | New York Review of Books | NobelPrize/LiteraturE | Nobel Prize/Literature | Nobel Prize for Literature | Nobel Prize in Literature | Northwestern University | Philip Roth | Pulitzer Prize for Fiction | Straussianism | The New York Review of Books | Timeline of Quebec history (1960 to 1981) | University of Chicago

 

Compose Your Message

Your Email Address or Pen Name (optional):
Subject:
Your Message:
 

 

 

 

 

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Saul Bellow".

 

Contact UsPrivacy Statement & Terms of Use

 
Copyright © 1999-2003 Knowledgerush.com. All rights reserved.