John Fante’s Ask the Dust: A Joining of Voices and Views 1st Edition Fordham University Press – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s):9780823287888, 0823287882
Product details:
- ISBN 10: 0823287882
- ISBN 13: 9780823287888
- Author: Fordham University Press
This volume assembles for the first time a staggering multiplicity of reflections and readings of John Fante’s 1939 classic, Ask the Dust, a true testament to the work’s present and future impact. The contributors to this work—writers, critics, fans, scholars, screenwriters, directors, and others—analyze the provocative set of diaspora tensions informing Fante’s masterpiece that distinguish it from those accounts of earlier East Coast migrations and minglings. A must-read for aficionados of L.A. fiction and new migration literature, John Fante’s “Ask the Dust”: A Joining of Voices and Views is destined for landmark status as the first volume of Fante studies to reveal the novel’s evolving intertextualities and intersectionalities. Contributors: Miriam Amico, Charles Bukowski, Stephen Cooper, Giovanna DiLello, John Fante, Valerio Ferme, Teresa Fiore, Daniel Gardner, Philippe Garnier, Robert Guffey, Ryan Holiday, Jan Louter, Chiara Mazzucchelli, Meagan Meylor, J’aime Morrison, Nathan Rabin, Alan Rifkin, Suzanne Manizza Roszak, Danny Shain, Robert Towne, Joel Williams
Table of contents:
1. New Approaches to John Fante’s Ask the Dust
From the Particular to the Universal: Vittorini’s Italian Adaptation of Ask the Dust
When Spirituality Ebbs and Flows: Religion and Diasporic Alienation in Ask the Dust
“Sad Flower in the Sand”: Camilla Lopez and the Erasure of Memory in Ask the Dust
“A Ramona in Reverse”: Writing the Madness of the Spanish Past in Ask the Dust
2. Sibling Arts: Ask the Dust in Dance, Music, the Graphic Novel, and French
Dancing with the Dust: Translating Ask the Dust to the Stage
Ask the Lyrics: John Fante in Music
Watch Out or You’ll End up in My Novel: The Lost World of Ask the Dust
Don’t Ask the French
3. Ask the Dust and Its Effects: Readers and Writers Respond
Amid the Dust
The Passion That Became a Festival
I Had Bandini: Reading Ask the Dust in Prison
Writing in the Dust
How Hitler Nearly Destroyed the Great American Novel
4. Ask the Dust and Its Due: Two Filmmakers and Bukowski Pay Tribute
Interview with Robert Towne
Letters from Los Angeles
“My Dear Bukowski,” “Hello John Fante”: Preface to Ask the Dust
5. The Attic, the Archive, and Beyond
From Family to Institutional Memory: A Conversation with Stephen Cooper
Prelude to “Prologue to Ask the Dust”
Goodbye, Bunker Hill
The Road to John Fante’s Los Angeles
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