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Aldous Huxley recollected: an oral history ([Rev. ed.].)

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Best-selling author Aldous Huxley's American years have been a period literary historians discounted.

His reputation suffered after his exile to California, which he undertook partly for the sake of his failing sight, partly out of disappointment with the European peace movement, and partly in search of new spiritual direction.

With his move to California, Huxley became part of Hollywood's Golden Age, working alongside such noted figures as Charlie Chaplin, Greta Garbo, F.

Scott Fitzgerald, Bertolt Brecht and Christopher Isherwood.

During this time Huxley published nineteen books. His writing and life underwent many transformations, and many crucial unanswered questions remained about his sojourn.

Were the writings of the American years as self-indulgent as critics claimed?

How did cinematic conventions influence his art? Did he ever reach that unitary mystical experience he sought throughout the last decades of his life?

Prominent oral historian and biographer David Dunaway responds to these questions, using interviews with co-workers, family, and friends and an analysis of Huxley's FBI files and little-known scripts for 'Jane Eyre' and 'Pride and Prejudice,' to provide us with intimate glimpses into Huxley's development as an author and a man.

For the oral and literary historian, an extended introduction and appendix describe in detail the methods, processes, and challenges of doing oral literary history research.

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£38.00
Product Details
Altamira Press
0585189927 / 9780585189925
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
823.912
01/01/2000
United States
English
203 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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Description based on print version record. Previous ed.: New York: Carroll & Graf, 1995.