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The Fantasy of Youth in Philip Roth's Later Novels
Author(s) -
Gabriela Glăvan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
linguaculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2285-9403
pISSN - 2067-9696
DOI - 10.47743/lincu-2020-2-0179
Subject(s) - vitality , framing (construction) , the imaginary , psychoanalysis , fantasy , sociology , harry potter , psychology , aesthetics , literature , art , history , philosophy , theology , archaeology
I intend to explore Philip Roth’s strategy of affirming youth as core value among his major themes revealing the experience of aging, illness and loss by revealing its particular framing in the novels of his later work. I shall analyze the contexts that connect youth to vitality and survival, revisiting some key moments in the long imaginary biographies of his notorious characters David Kepesh and Nathan Zuckerman. Although central in Roth’s work, youth has been commonly investigated in connection to allegories that anchor the writer’s oeuvre in a territory marked by nostalgia, loss, and a sense of impending vital exhaustion. My aim is to isolate this issue more clearly and focus on its specificity rather than its connectivity.

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