Philip Milton Roth (born
March 19, 1933) is an American
novelist. He gained fame with the 1959 story
collection
Goodbye,
Columbus, and has since become one of the most honored
authors of his generation: Roth's books have twice been awarded the
National Book Award, twice the
National Book Critics
Circle award, and three times the
PEN/Faulkner Award. He received a
Pulitzer Prize for his
1997 novel,
American
Pastoral, which featured his best known character,
Nathan Zuckerman, the subject of
many other of Roth's novels. His 2001 novel
The Human Stain, another Zuckerman
novel, was awarded the United Kingdom's
WH Smith Literary Award for the best
book of the year.
His fiction, set frequently in Newark
, New
Jersey
, is known for its intensely autobiographical character, for
philosophically and formally blurring the distinction between
reality and fiction, for its "supple, ingenious style," and for its
provocative explorations of Jewish
and American
identity.
Life
Roth grew
up in the Weequahic
neighborhood of Newark, New Jersey
, as the second child of first-generation American
parents, Jews of Galician descent, and graduated
from Newark's Weequahic High School
in 1950. Roth attended Bucknell University
, earning a degree in English. He then pursued
graduate studies at the University of Chicago
, where he received an M.A. in English literature and worked briefly as
an instructor in the university's writing program.
Roth then
taught creative writing at the University of Iowa
and Princeton University
. He continued his academic career at the
University of
Pennsylvania
, where he taught comparative literature before
retiring from teaching in 1991.
While at
Chicago
, Roth met the novelist Saul
Bellow, as well as Margaret
Martinson, who became his first wife. Their separation
in 1963, along with Martinson's death in a car crash in 1968, left
a lasting mark on Roth's literary output. Specifically, Martinson
was the inspiration for female characters in several of Roth's
novels, including Lucy Nelson in
When She Was Good, and Maureen
Tarnopol in
My Life As a
Man. Between the end of his studies and the publication of
his first book in 1959, Roth served two years in the
United States Army and then wrote short
fiction and criticism for various magazines, including movie
reviews for
The New
Republic. Events in Roth's personal life have occasionally
been the subject of media scrutiny. According to his
pseudo-confessional novel
Operation Shylock (1993), Roth
suffered a
nervous breakdown in
the late 1980s. In 1990, he married his long-time companion,
English actress
Claire Bloom. In 1994
they separated, and in 1996 Bloom published a memoir,
Leaving a
Doll's House, which described the couple's marriage in detail,
much of which was unflattering to Roth. Certain aspects of
I Married a Communist
have been regarded by critics as veiled rebuttals to accusations
put forth in Bloom's memoir.
Career
Roth's first book,
Goodbye,
Columbus, a
novella and five
short stories, won the
National Book Award in 1960, and
afterwards he published two novels,
Letting Go and
When She Was Good. However, it was
not until the publication of his third novel,
Portnoy's Complaint, in 1969 that
Roth enjoyed widespread commercial and critical success. During the
1970s Roth experimented in various modes, from the political satire
Our Gang to the
Kafkaesque The
Breast. By the end of the decade Roth had created his
alter ego Nathan Zuckerman. In a series of highly self-referential
novels and novellas that followed between 1979 and 1986, Zuckerman
appeared as either the main character or an interlocutor.
Sabbath's Theater (1995)
has Roth's most lecherous protagonist, Mickey Sabbath, a disgraced
former puppeteer. In complete contrast, the first volume of Roth's
second Zuckerman trilogy, 1997's
American Pastoral, focuses on the
life of virtuous Newark athletics star Swede Levov and the tragedy
that befalls him when his teenage daughter transforms into a
domestic
terrorist during the late 1960s.
I Married a Communist
(1998) focuses on the
McCarthy era.
The Human Stain examines
identity politics in 1990s
America.
The Dying Animal
(2001) is a short novel about
eros and death
that revisits literary professor David Kepesh, protagonist of two
1970s works,
The Breast and
The Professor of
Desire. In
The
Plot Against America (2004), Roth imagines an alternate
American history in which
Charles
Lindbergh, aviator hero and isolationist, is elected U.S.
president in 1940, and the U.S. negotiates an understanding with
Hitler's Nazi Germany and embarks on its own program of
anti-Semitism.
Roth's 182-page novel
Everyman, a meditation on illness,
desire, and death, was published in May 2006.
Exit Ghost, which again features Nathan
Zuckerman, was released in October 2007. According to the book's
publisher, it is the last Zuckerman novel.
Indignation, Roth's 29th book, was
published on September 16, 2008. Set in 1951, during the Korean
War, it follows Marcus Messner's departure from Newark to Ohio's
Winesburg College, where he begins his sophomore year. The
announced titles of Roth’s 30th and 31st books are
The
Humbling and
Nemesis.
In October of 2009, during an interview with Tina Brown of
The
Daily Beast website to promote
The Humbling, Roth
considered the future of literature and its place in society,
stating his belief that within 25 years the reading of novels will
be regarded as a "cultic" activity:
"I was being optimistic about 25 years really. I think
it's going to be cultic. I think always people will be reading them
but it will be a small group of people. Maybe more people than now
read Latin poetry, but somewhere in that range...To read a novel
requires a certain amount of concentration, focus, devotion to the
reading. If you read a novel in more than two weeks you don't read
the novel really. So I think that kind of concentration and focus
and attentiveness is hard to come by – it's hard to find huge
numbers of people, large numbers of people, significant numbers of
people, who have those qualities,"
When asked his opinion on the emergence of digital books and
e-books as possibly replacing printed copy, Roth was equally as
negative and downbeat about the prospect:
"The book can't compete with the screen. It couldn't
compete [in the] beginning with the movie screen. It couldn't
compete with the television screen, and it can't compete with the
computer screen...Now we have all those screens, so against all
those screens a book couldn't measure up."
This interview is not the first time that Roth has expressed
incredible pessimism over the future of the novel and its
significance in recent years. Talking to the
Observer's
Robert McCrum in 2001, he said that "I'm not good at finding
'encouraging' features in American culture. I doubt that aesthetic
literacy has much of a future here."
Influences and themes
Much of Roth's fiction revolves around (semi-)autobiographical
themes, while self-consciously and playfully addressing the perils
of establishing connections between the author Philip Roth and his
fictional lives and voices, including narrators and protagonists
such as David Kepesh and
Nathan
Zuckerman or even the character "Philip Roth", of which there
are two in
Operation
Shylock. In Roth's fiction, the question of authorship is
intertwined with the theme of the idealistic, secular
Jewish-American son who attempts to distance himself from Jewish
customs and traditions, and from what he perceives as the at times
suffocating influence of parents, rabbis, and other community
leaders. Jewish sons such as most infamously
Alexander Portnoy and later
Nathan Zuckerman rebel by denouncing
Judaism, while at the same time remaining attached to a sense of
Jewish identity. Roth's fiction has been described by critics as
pervaded by "a kind of alienation that is enlivened and exacerbated
by what binds it".
Roth's first work,
Goodbye,
Columbus, was criticized as infused with a sense of
self-loathing. In response, Roth, in his 1963 essay "Writing About
Jews" (collected in
Reading Myself and Others), maintained
that he wanted to explore the conflict between the call to Jewish
solidarity and his desire to be free to question the values and
morals of middle-class Jewish-Americans uncertain of their
identities in an era of cultural assimilation and upward social
mobility:
"The cry 'Watch out for the goyim!' at times seems more
the expression of an unconscious wish than of a warning: Oh that
they were out there, so that we could be together
here!
A rumor of persecution, a taste of exile, might even
bring with it the old world of feelings and habits — something to
replace the new world of social accessibility and moral
indifference, the world which tempts all our promiscuous instincts,
and where one cannot always figure out what a Jew is that a
Christian is not."
In Roth's fiction, the exploration of "promiscuous instincts"
within the context of Jewish-American lives, mainly from a male
viewpoint, plays an important role. In the words of critic
Hermione Lee:
"Philip Roth's fiction strains to shed the burden of
Jewish traditions and proscriptions.
… The liberated Jewish consciousness, let loose into
the disintegration of the American Dream, finds itself deracinated
and homeless.
American society and politics, by the late sixties, are
a grotesque travesty of what Jewish immigrants had traveled
towards: liberty, peace, security, a decent liberal
democracy."
While Roth's fiction has strong autobiographical influences, it has
also incorporated social commentary and political satire, most
obviously in
Our Gang and
Operation Shylock. Since
the
1990s, Roth's fiction has often combined
autobiographical elements with retrospective dramatizations of
postwar American life. Roth has described
American Pastoral and the two
following novels as a loosely connected "American trilogy". All
these novels deal with aspects of the postwar era against the
backdrop of the nostalgically remembered Jewish-American childhood
of Nathan Zuckerman, in which the experience of life on
the American home
front during the Second World War features prominently.
In much of Roth's fiction, the 1940s, comprising Roth's and
Zuckerman's childhood, mark a high point of American idealism and
social cohesion. A more satirical treatment of the patriotism and
idealism of the war years is evident in Roth's more comic novels,
such as
Portnoy's
Complaint and
Sabbath's
Theater. In
The
Plot Against America, the
alternate history of the war years
dramatizes the prevalence of anti-Semitism and racism in America
during the war years, despite the promotion of increasingly
influential anti-racist ideals in wartime. Nonetheless, the 1940s,
and the
New Deal era of the 1930s that
preceded it, are portrayed in much of Roth's recent fiction as a
heroic phase in American history. A sense of frustration with
social and political developments in the US since the
1940s is palpable in the
American trilogy and
Exit Ghost, but had already been
present in Roth's earlier works that contained political and social
satire, such as
Our Gang
and
The Great
American Novel. Writing about the latter novel, Hermione
Lee points to the sense disillusionment with "the American Dream"
in Roth's fiction:
"The mythic words on which Roth's generation was
brought up — winning, patriotism, gamesmanship — are desanctified;
greed, fear, racism, and political ambition are disclosed as the
motive forces behind the 'all-American ideals'."
Awards and honors
Two of Roth's works of fiction have won the
National Book Award; two others were
finalists. Two have won
National Book Critics Circle
awards; again, another two were finalists. He has also won three
PEN/Faulkner Awards
(
Operation Shylock, The Human Stain, and
Everyman) and a
Pulitzer
Prize for Fiction for his 1997 novel,
American
Pastoral. In 2001,
The Human Stain was awarded the
United Kingdom's
WH Smith
Literary Award for the best book of the year. In 2002, he was
awarded the National Book Foundation's Award for Distinguished
Contribution to American Letters. Literary critic
Harold Bloom has named him as one of the four
major American novelists still at work, along with
Thomas Pynchon,
Don
DeLillo, and
Cormac McCarthy.
His 2004 novel
The Plot
Against America won the
Sidewise Award for
Alternate History in 2005 as well as the
Society of American
Historians’
James
Fenimore Cooper Prize for Best Historical Fiction. Roth was
also awarded the United Kingdom's
WH Smith Literary Award for the best
book of the year, an award Roth has received twice. He was honored
in his hometown in October 2005 when then-mayor
Sharpe James presided over the unveiling of a
street sign in Roth's name on the corner of Summit and Keer Avenues
where Roth lived for much of his childhood, a setting prominent in
The Plot Against America. A plaque on the house where the
Roths lived was also unveiled. In May 2006, he was given the
PEN/Nabokov Award, and in 2007 he was awarded the PEN/Faulkner
award for
Everyman, making him the award's only three-time
winner. In April 2007, he was chosen as the recipient of the first
PEN/Saul
Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction.
The May 21, 2006 issue of
The New York Times Book
Review announced the results of a letter that was sent to
what the publication described as "a couple of hundred prominent
writers, critics, editors and other literary sages, asking them to
please identify 'the single best work of American fiction published
in the last 25 years.'" Six of Roth's novels were in the 22
selected:
American Pastoral, The Counterlife,
Operation Shylock, Sabbath's Theater, The
Human Stain, and
The Plot Against America. The
accompanying essay, written by critic
A.O. Scott, stated, "If
we had asked for the single best writer of fiction of the past 25
years, [Roth] would have won."
Bibliography
Zuckerman novels
(The above four books are collected as
Zuckerman Bound)
Roth novels
Kepesh novels
Other novels
Nonfiction
Collections
Library of America Editions
Edited by Ross Miller
- Novels and Stories 1959-1962 (2005) ISBN
978-1-93108279-2.
- Novels 1967-1972 (2005) ISBN 978-1-93108280-8.
- Novels 1973-1977 (2006) ISBN 978-1-93108296-9.
- Zuckerman Bound: A Trilogy and Epilogue 1979-1985
(2007) ISBN 978-1-59853-011-7.
- Novels and Other Narratives 1986-1991 (2008) ISBN
978-1-59853-030-8.
List of awards
References
Further reading and literary criticism
- Bloom, Harold and Welsch, Gabe, eds., Modern Critical
Interpretations of Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint, Chelsea
House, 2003.
- Bloom, Harold, ed., Modern Critical Views of Philip
Roth, Chelsea House, New York, 2003.
- Cooper, Alan, Philip Roth and the Jews (SUNY Series in
Modern Jewish Literature and Culture), SUNY Press, Albany, NY,
1996.
- Kinzel, Till, Die Tragödie und Komödie des amerikanischen
Lebens. Eine Studie zu Zuckermans Amerika in Philip Roths
Amerika-Trilogie (American Studies Monograph Series),
Heidelberg: Winter, 2006.
- Milowitz, Steven, Philip Roth Considered: The
Concentrationary Universe of the American Writer, Routledge,
New York, 2000.
- Morley, Catherine, The Quest for Epic in Contemporary
American Literature, Routledge, New York, 2008.
- Parrish, Timothy, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Philip
Roth, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2007.
- Podhoretz, Norman, "The Adventures of Philip Roth,"
Commentary (October 1998), reprinted as "Philip Roth, Then
and Now" in The Norman Podhoretz Reader, 2004.
- Posnock, Ross, Philip Roth's Rude Truth: The Art of
Immaturity, Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey,
2006.
- Royal, Derek Parker, Philip Roth: New Perspectives on an
American Author, Praeger Publishers, Santa Barbara, CA,
2005.
- Safer, Elaine B., Mocking the Age: The Later Novels of
Philip Roth (SUNY Series in Modern Jewish Literature and
Culture), SUNY Press, Albany, NY, 2006.
- Searles, George J., ed., Conversations With Philip
Roth, University of Mississippi Press, Jackson, Mississippi,
1992.
- Searles, George J., The Fiction of Philip Roth and John
Updike, Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale,
Illinois, 1984.
- Shostak, Debra B., Philip Roth: Countertexts,
Counterlives, University of South Carolina Press, Columbia,
SC, 2004.
- Simic, Charles, " The Nicest
Boy in the World," The New York Review of Books, Vol.
LV, No. 15, 9 October 2008.
- Wöltje, Wiebke-Maria, My finger on the pulse of the
nation. Intellektuelle Protagonisten im Romanwerk Philip
Roths (Mosaic, 26), Trier: WVT, 2006.
External links
Informational
Interviews