Robert Warshow: Life And Works, By David Denby Editor's Foreword Introduction By Lionel Trilling Author's Preface PART 1: AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE 1. The Legacy of the 30's 2. Woofed With Dreams 3. Clifford Odets: Poet of the Jewish Middle Class 4. The "Idealism" of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg 5. Paul, the Honor Comics, and Dr. Wertham 6. E. B, White and the New Yorker 7. An Old Man Gone PART 2: AMERICAN MOVIES 8. The Gangster as Tragic Hero 9. Movie Chronicle: The Westerner
A legendary little book, partly because its author died at the age of 37, but mostly because it stands as a virtually unique representative from its period of a consistently open-minded, moral, aesthetic, and political engagement with commercial culture. -- Louis Menand
Robert Warshow (1917-1955) was a member of the community that has come to be known as the "New York Intellectuals." He was an editor of Commentary magazine and an astute critic of cinema. He tragically died of a heart-attack at the age of 37. At the time of his death in 1975, Lionel Trilling was University Professor at Columbia University. Stanley Cavell (1926–2018) was Walter M. Cabot Professor of Aesthetics and the General Theory of Value, Emeritus, at Harvard University. His numerous books include The Claim of Reason, Cities of Words, and Philosophy the Day after Tomorrow.
A legendary little book, partly because its author died at the age
of 37, but mostly because it stands as a virtually unique
representative from its period of a consistently open-minded,
moral, aesthetic, and political engagement with commercial
culture.
*Louis Menand*
The way we really feel about our lives' (and our movies, and our
comic books) is precisely what [Warshow is trying to get at.
European critics like Siegfried Krakauer or Theodor Adorno had
tried to neutralize the mind-bending power of mass culture with big
theories, but Warshow believed that his best weapon against
ideology was his personal experience as a moviegoer and reader...A
claim often made about Warshow is that with his affection for the
less-than-highbrow arts and insistence on the audience's responses,
he was a forerunner of what would become cultural studies.
But...his most important attribute--and legacy--was a
well-developed civic consciousness...He demanded of art, low or
middle or high, that it be responsible...he made you understand
that responsibility is inseparable from integrity.
*New York Times Book Review*
[Warshow's] writing on film remains remarkably fresh...[He] wrote
so well because he wrote so honestly about how movies affected
him...[He] was unusually gifted in registering the emotional impact
of such genres as the western and the gangster film, which he
correctly saw as the myths of our society...Although movie-going is
a solitary act, many critics write as if they are members of a
gang, trying to please some clique or ideology outside the movie
theater. Warshow refused to do this; he distrusted theories or
methods that denied the immediacy of the movie-going experience.
Because he remained true to his own response, and recorded these
responses with great eloquence, his writing remains alive, against
all odds.
*National Post*
To read these pieces in any order whatsoever is to come into
contact with a unique mind. Warshow wrote about literature,
politics, art films, comic strips, the Jews, the theater, and, of
course, American movies--the subject for which he is probably best
remembered by many of his readers. To all these subjects he brought
a sensibility that was in its own way extremely tough, at the same
time most forgiving, and unblinkingly open to a very broad variety
of human possibilities.
*Commentary*
The Immediate Experience, an anthology of Warshow's pop-cult
criticism that first appeared posthumously in 1962, has now
received a deluxe reissue, featuring thoughtful appreciations by
David Denby and Stanley Cavell, along with eight previously
uncollected essays. In addition to Warshow's extensive film
writing, the book includes analytical discourses on subjects
ranging from Arthur Miller and Clifford Odets to Franz Kafka and
Gertrude Stein, to George Herriman's comic strip Krazy Kat...The
Immediate Experience is not only a paradigm of trenchant film
criticism, but also a fundamental text in the discipline of
cultural studies.`
*Philadelphia City Paper*
Warshow is considered to be an inspiration by popular contemporary
critics like David Denby. Writing mostly in Commentary and Partisan
Review, Warshow was one of the first American intellectuals to take
Krazy Kat and Charlie Chaplin as a fact of life and engage
seriously with popular culture.
*Jewish Week*
The Immediate Experience collects almost all we have of [Warshow's]
supple mind. Long out of print, now reissued and expanded, it is
likely to reestablish its author as a preeminent observer of
American pop...Warshow was a pioneer, writing such stuff at a time
when almost no one else was and writing it better than few have
since. A brilliantly pithy sentence from the preface sums up his
aim, states his influence, and points to the force of his prose: "A
man watches a movie, and the critic must acknowledge that he is a
man."
*Entertainment Weekly*
The essays in The Immediate Experience remain a beacon, a light to
begin to show the way to how we might escape our present cultural
confusions.
*Los Angeles Times*
[Warshow] was a very influential mind of his times. This is a
virtually all-inclusive anthology of his published writings. After
a half-century, his political zeal now seems almost ridiculously
naïve, but his appreciation of the important energies of popular
culture--the vitality of the good stuff in the mass market--today
seems prescient of many of today's soundly accepted values...This
is both nostalgic and provocative social criticism.
*Baltimore Sun*
There are few critics whose work truly resonates with a
reader...The Immediate Experience provides the most complete record
available of the work of just such a critic, whose ability to
inspire remains fully intact.
*Variety*
It's a joy to have The Immediate Experience back in print, and with
eight new additions. (All are book reviews; they afford us the
opportunity to judge Warshow's interaction with Kafka, Hemingway,
Gertrude Stein, and Shalom Aleichem)...The quality of Warshow's
prose matches the quality of his thinking...Read Warshow and feel
your mind expand.
*Boston Phoenix*
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