Words Unique to Suttree

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

Copyright © 2007 by Christopher Forbis, Wesley G. Morgan and John Sepich Rev: 4 January 2021 at www.JohnSepich.com Cormac McCarthy's Words Unique to Suttree The data set used for this report include all the words in Cormac McCarthy's: The Orchard Keeper, Outer Dark, Child of God, Suttree, Blood Meridian, All the Pretty Horses, The Stonemason, The Crossing, The Gardener’s Son, The Sunset Limited, Cities of the Plain, No Country For Old Men, The Road, The Counselor. Title pages, chapter numbers and page numbers have been removed. Total unique words: 4328 9 220 adorning 287, 398 all-girl 101 18 433 adrip 270 allegory 246 87 220 adumbrate 86 allen 168, 433 1504 304 adumbration 21, 254 alley's 100, 443 1884 433, 454 advertisment 203 alleymouth 28 1942 75 aerialists 50 alleyways 282, 384, 438 1952 220 affrays 280 allowance 47 21505 85, 462 aflame 383 alltime 14 aaangh 56 afreight 4 almstress's 67 ab 79, 112, 131, 200, 205, 226, african 412 almstresses 431 228, 230, 246, 374, 440, 446, after-hours 246 almswise 177 465 aftertaste 253 along-side 156, 351 ab's 107, 226, 446 agawp 404 alpenglow 456 abbatoir 67, 299 ageblackened 423 alters 253 abednego 29 agee 238 altitude 57 abet 200 agh 271 altitudes 285, 313, 400 ablutions 404 agonies 61, 154 alveolar 260 abscission 80 agrin 77, 281 amaurotic 332 absolutes 372 ahhg 140 ambered 306 abstractions 453 ailor 374, 381 ambergris 407 absurdities 423 airbrakes 449 amercy 434 accents 386 airconditioned 69 americas 152 accresced 262 airholes 456 amighty 139 acheron 190 airshaft 188 amorphic 407 acidic 223 aislewise 102 amounts 352 aclatter 162, 455 ajog 285 amphora 425 acnefaced 254 alabastrine 187 amphoric 27 acrid 137, 254 alacrity 52 amuck 114 acridity 28 albified 291 amulets 280, 468 acrimony 129 alchemical 212, 287 amusement 15, 50, 73, 434, ad 129, 243 alchemy 306 453, 457 adder's 282 alchimia 253 anachronistically 423 adders 349 alcoholic 19 analogues 4 addles 403 aldrich 190 anatomy 262 addorsed 113, 327 aleck 350 anchored 188 adenoidal 54 alembics 188 andrew 170 adept 403 alfalfa 27, 345 androgynous 426 adolescent 214 alias 460 android 56 adorn 136 alice 432, 434, 456 androleptic 290 aneled 460 artist 167, 399 baal 280 anent 136 artless 429 babel 463 aneroid 424 arwood's 144 babushka 395 anesthetized 405 aryans 4 backdrops 129 angleiron 205 ascent 136 backfired 384 animalcules 409 ashblond 389 backhoe 470 anklets 327 ashcans 28, 100, 384 backlots 81 annals 67, 130 asheville 401, 407 backoaring 324 announcements 404 aspectant 178 backporch 381 annular 108, 284 aspergillum 254 backwash 70, 453 anoint 424 aspiring 4 backwater 120-121, 125, 210, antenna 178 assaying 259 291 anthracite 74 assed 58, 131 baggageman 294 anthroparians 188 assembler 384 baitbuckets 269 antics 214 assembles 384 baitcans 96 antipode 149 assholes 73 baited 194, 283, 355, 453 antipodes 5 assignation 99 baitfish 121 antisuttree 28 assignations 397 baking 69 anxiously 193 assorted 457 bale 63, 108, 377 anytime 132, 318 asthma 367 baling 256 apartments 383, 401 astounded 313 balingtwine 367 apex 254 astronomical 453 ballbats 215 apostrophe 129 asymmetrical 53 ballbearing 103 apparitions 428 atavism 233 ballclack 299 applauded 464 athanasia 257 ballplayers 299 applebox 219, 260 athens 396, 398 balsam 290 applewood 119, 292 athwart 7, 187, 299 banister 174, 396 apposition 423 atlantis 168 banjaxed 364 appraisal 386 attacking 209 bankbook 401 apprehension 348 attar 428 banknote 367 apprehensive 388 attics 459 banquette 376 appropriating 116 attracting 172 barbate 453 appurtenances 212 attuned 207 barbels 8 apronpocket 105 audubon 238 barbered 470 apronskirt 70 augured 22 barbicans 67 aptitude 434 aurora 385 bareheaded 278 aqua 175 austral 128 barge's 247 arable 208 auto 81, 93, 149 bargeload 127 arachnoids 149 autoparts 94 barkeeper 73 arboreal 286 autos 3, 93, 98, 208, 398 barndoors 384 archetypal 457 autoscopic 28 barnred 439 architraves 416, 461 avenues 83 barrens 448 archsots 457 aviator's 427 barrow 348, 423 arctic 61 avowing 456 barry 437 aridity 427 awakened 325 baseboards 60 arisen 382 awarded 348 basil 134 armcrook 119 awonder 102 basketmakers 433 armrests 95 axed 411 bassackwards 246 armycoat 383 axemark 150 basswood 357 arrowbolt 289 axleshafts 269 batches 329 arrowed 286 axletree 195 batclotted 262 batfowler 137 beltless 400 blacksmith 130 batlike 404 benignity 124 blacktooth 58 batshaped 149 benison 166 blackwater 177 battlers 185, 188 bereaved 150, 285 bladderlike 356 batwinged 89 bert 220 blah 401 baubles 91 besieged 447 blanked 14 bawds 457 bestest 123 bleaching 448 bawdy 100 bestiality 49 blears 168 baywindow 297, 304-305, 364 beswirled 284 bleating 196 beachwrack 408 beth 128 bleedings 377 beacon 354, 408 betide 79 blinds 188, 404, 407 beadily 189 betook 457 bloat 357 beadle 308 betrolled 144 bloodcakes 464 beardless 456 betruncheoned 108 bloodcovered 140 bearhunter 24, 26, 73-74, 189 betterhearted 25 bloodfilled 316 beasties 225 beveled 228 bloodliens 456 beatrice 452 beveltoothed 262 bloodwebbed 424 bechrismed 460 bewenned 61 bloodyheaded 186 beckoned 92, 263, 449 bewept 134 blotting 30 becrazed 353 bewildered 61 bloused 110 becrept 276 bewintered 178 blowhole 88 bedframe 93 bewray 457 blownout 3, 72 bedpans 458 bezel 274 blueflocced 67 bedsheet 404 bias 120, 453, 457 bluegray 177 bedspring 99 biblecamp 121 bluegreen 450 beefy 83 bibpocket 92 bluffside 238 beer[-]taverns 405 bildad 316 boarcat 424 beerdrinkers 69 bilgewater 13 boardhard 423 beerjoints 375 billboard 178, 345 boarspears 287 beerlamps 75 billies 443 boas 403 beerlight 456 billikin 304 boat's 7 beersign 338, 386 billyclub 301 boated 205, 325, 356 beetle 414 bipedal 453 boater 109 beetlehusks 80 birch 284 boathouse 419 befell 187 birches 286 boatload 215 befitting 457 birchtrunks 287 boatmen 79 beggar's 103-104, 414 birdheaded 327 boatshanty 365 beggarlady's 66 birdhollow 424 boatshaped 306 begone 288 birdlime 100, 382 bobbers 107 begones 289 birdnotes 317 bobbyjohn 23, 26, 301 begonias 269 birdshit 127 bobbyjohn's 384 beholder 281 birdtongue 461 bodine 437 belch 264 biretta 254 bodypanels 266 believing 14 bitching 98 boggers 457 bellcaptain 396 bittern 125 bolos 3 bellhop 391 bivalve 452 bondsman 84 bellhops 399 bivalves 82 bondsmens 444 bellmen 27 bizarrely 405 bonecoupling 136 bellpeal 385 blackboards 304 bonedust 4 belltoll 27 blackburn 25, 53, 61 bonemeal 119, 188 bellycooling 459 blackburn's 53 bonepipes 280 bonesaws 67 brigades 116 butts 339 boneyard's 70 brigands 457 butyljawed 452 bootlegger 343 brimmed 169 buzzard's 175 boreal 460 brine 459 byington 124 bosky 290 briskets 276 byrd 51-52, 226, 456 bottleblue 452 broaching 205 c's 330 bottleglass 275 broadcloth 427 cabbage's 183 bottlenecks 230 broaden 120 cabbie 450 bourbon 339 brocaded 92 cabman's 400 bovines 208 brogues 288 cackling 78 bowels' 453 broiling 64 cacodemons 287 bower's 103, 372 brokendown 396 cadavers 144 bowerpaths 416 bromo 48 calcimine 448 bowlegs 320 brood 105 callahan 23, 47-49, 51-54, 58, bowplanks 9 broomhandles 437 60, 73-74, 76-77, 185-186, 189, bowwave 211 brooming 471 370-371, 374-376, 452 boxcars 9, 257 brothel 49 callahan's 47, 51-52, 55, 376- boxlid 333 browne 129 377, 456 boxwood 13, 102 brownlooking 51 cambered 304 boychild 140 bruin 421 cambreled 67 boydove 100 bruton 263 cameos 82 boyyy 452 bryson 291 cameral 291 bracket 253, 397 buddeee 351 camshaft 344, 406 brail 318, 322-325, 350 budding 212 canceled 382 brailboat's 319 buffed 437 candescent 409 brailed 394, 457 buffer 187 candleflames 423-424, 428 brailin 311 buggery 246 candlelit 460 brails 319, 351 buglemouth 69 candlesticks 228 brainpulp 119 buildins 181 candlewhite 452 brainsurgeon's 188 bulblight 50, 448 candybar 276 braked 33 bulbous 14, 86, 306, 456 cannellate 120 brakeman's 364 bulby 61 cannons 8 branching 320 bulge 27 canoe 210 brandywinged 215 bullbat 215 canopies 101 brannam 300 bullboat 189 cantaloupe 49 brasscolored 119 bulletskulled 81 canticle 177 brawls 375 bulltrout 283 capacious 114, 217 breach 452 bum 157 capers 359 breadboard 319 bumps 389 capricorn 127 breakfasting 321 bungalow 165 captor 355 breakneck 400 bungalow's 167 capture 38 breeks 22, 284 bunged 32 carbarn 178 briarbush 207 bunghole 99, 167 carboncolored 261 bricabrac 97 buntinged 457 carboncopy 327 brickbat 378 buoybells 428 carbonic 382 brickbats 304 burglar 264 carboys 212 brickpaved 304 burials 152 carbuncles 417 bridgelights 29, 251, 268 burlington 23 carburetor 406 bridgepier 107 burntwinged 89 carder 5 bridlepath 290 businesslike 396 cardgame 56 bridling 383 buttock 315, 453 cardtable 278, 339, 374 careered 77 centrifuge 50 christmases 290 caricature 127 cerberus 105 chromeblue 455 carinated 275 cerements 14 chromos 130 carious 276 cerise 452 chuckholes 385 carnivores 290 cerulean 393 chuffing 438 carny 257 cesspipe 136, 261 churchclothes 327 carol 128 cesspipes 174 churched 254 caroled 304 chainload 93 churlish 254, 327 carp 7-8, 67-68, 91, 145, 194, chairarms 428 chutes 415 199 chambray 101 cigarbox 103 carpets 95 chameleon 128 cimmerians 275 carpetthread 279 chamfers 450 cinder 3, 9, 21, 66, 150, 177, carriagehouse 13 chancery 455 364, 448, 463 carriages 8, 266 changeapron 104, 299 cinderpath 227, 388 carrots 61 changeaprons 168 cindery 91 cartographer 260 changepouch 402 cinnabar 253 cartoken 177 chapbook 4 circlesaw 263 caryatids 307 charlatan's 101 citrine 253 casketmaker's 3 charon 107 clabbered 84, 456 castanets 351 charting 260 clams 369 castellated 471 charts 260, 262 clancy 15, 78, 109, 192 caster 188 chasing 75 clans 136 catamite 241, 417 chattanooga 257 clarence 25, 416 cataphracted 121 chaw
Recommended publications
  • Nature As Mystical Reality in the Fiction of Cormac Mccarthy Skyler Latshaw Grand Valley State University

    Nature As Mystical Reality in the Fiction of Cormac Mccarthy Skyler Latshaw Grand Valley State University

    Grand Valley State University ScholarWorks@GVSU Masters Theses Graduate Research and Creative Practice 8-2013 Burning on the Shore of an Unknowable Void: Nature as Mystical Reality in the Fiction of Cormac McCarthy Skyler Latshaw Grand Valley State University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/theses Recommended Citation Latshaw, Skyler, "Burning on the Shore of an Unknowable Void: Nature as Mystical Reality in the Fiction of Cormac McCarthy" (2013). Masters Theses. 64. http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/theses/64 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate Research and Creative Practice at ScholarWorks@GVSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@GVSU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Burning on the Shore of an Unknowable Void: Nature as Mystical Reality in the Fiction of Cormac McCarthy Skyler Latshaw A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of GRAND VALLEY STATE UNIVERSITY In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Arts English Literature August 2013 Abstract Language, spirituality, and the natural world are all prominent themes in the novels of Cormac McCarthy. This thesis examines the relationship between the three themes, arguing that McCarthy empowers the natural world with a spiritual significance that may be experienced by humanity, but not completely understood or expressed. Man, being what Kenneth Burke describes as the “symbol-using” animal, cannot express reality through language without distorting it. Language also leads to the commodification of the natural world by allowing man to reevaluate the reality around him based on factors of his own devising.
  • The Influence of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick on Cormac Mccarthy's Blood Meridian

    The Influence of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick on Cormac Mccarthy's Blood Meridian

    UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones 8-1-2014 The Influence of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick on Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian Ryan Joseph Tesar University of Nevada, Las Vegas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations Part of the American Literature Commons, and the Literature in English, North America Commons Repository Citation Tesar, Ryan Joseph, "The Influence of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick on Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian" (2014). UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. 2218. http://dx.doi.org/10.34917/6456449 This Thesis is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Thesis in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Thesis has been accepted for inclusion in UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE INFLUENCE OF HERMAN MELVILLE’S MOBY-DICK ON CORMAC MCCARTHY’S BLOOD MERIDIAN by Ryan Joseph Tesar Bachelor of Arts in English University of Nevada, Las Vegas 2012 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Arts – English Department of English College of Liberal Arts The Graduate College University of Nevada, Las Vegas August 2014 Copyright by Ryan Joseph Tesar, 2014 All Rights Reserved - THE GRADUATE COLLEGE We recommend the thesis prepared under our supervision by Ryan Joseph Tesar entitled The Influence of Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick on Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian is approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts - English Department of English John C.
  • Cormac Mccarthy's Suttree

    Cormac Mccarthy's Suttree

    Missing in Portuguese: Prolegomenon to a Translation of Cormac McCarthy‟s Suttree Michael Scott Doyle (University of North Carolina at Charlotte) Missing in Portuguese is a translation of Cormac McCarthy‟s fourth novel, Suttree.1 Why should this be of concern? Because Portuguese is a major world language,2 Cormac McCarthy is one of the most acclaimed contemporary American novelists, and Suttree, published in 1979, is one of his most lauded novels. McCarthy—winner of a prestigious MacArthur Fellowship (1981), also known as the “genius grant,” the National Book Award (1992) and National Book Critics Circle Award (1992) for his novel All the Pretty Horses, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize (2007), and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (2007) for The Road—is a high priest among American writers. While eight of his ten novels have been translated into Portuguese—O Guarda do Pomar in 1996 [The Orchard Keeper, 1965], Filho de Deus, 1994 [Child of God, 1974], Meridiano de Sangue, 2006 [Blood Meridian, 1985], Todos os Belos Cavalos, 1993 [All the Pretty Horses, 1992], A Travessia, 1999 [The Crossing, 1994], Cidades da Planície, 2001 [Cities of the Plain, 1998], Onde os Velhos Não Têm Vez, 2007 [No Country for Old Men, 2005] and A Estrada, 2007 [The Road, 2006]—Suttree awaits its rightful rendition into this major literary language as well.3 The translation-to-be will require the talents of a master wordsmith in order to felicitously bring the novel‟s many complexities into Portuguese, and doing so will enrich the library of world literature available in the Portuguese language.
  • “Constructed on No Known Paradigm”: Novelistic Form and the Southern City in Cormac Mccarthy’S Suttree

    “Constructed on No Known Paradigm”: Novelistic Form and the Southern City in Cormac Mccarthy’S Suttree

    “Constructed on no known paradigm”: Novelistic Form and the Southern City in Cormac McCarthy’s Suttree Andrew James Dykstal Bachelor of Arts, Hillsdale College, 2013 A thesis presented to the graduate faculty of the University of Virginia in candidacy for the degree of Master of Arts Department of English University of Virginia April 2017 Dykstal 1 This thesis is dedicated to my peers and teachers at UVA and Hillsdale College, with particular bows to Jerry McGann—my thesis director—and to Michael Levenson, both mentors whose patience, encouragement, and graceful professionalism have shaped my thinking and my aspirations; to Fred and Carol Langley and the members of the American Legion whose generosity made possible my graduate education; and to my grandfather Cornelius Dykstal, who departed the world on the day I completed this project and whose wry humor and dignity throughout the twilight of his years embody the qualities back cover blurbs are always insisting I ought to find in Cormac McCarthy’s books. I would also like to thank friends who read drafts and housemates who tolerated my sometimes excessive monopolization of the kitchen table. Their days of eating breakfast amid unreasonable stacks of books have at long last come to a close. Dykstal 2 “Like their counterparts in northern cities, business leaders in the New South came to acknowledge the social disorder of their cities as regrettable byproducts of the very urban-industrial world they had championed. Drunkenness, prostitution, disease, poverty, crime, and political corruption were all understood as symptoms of the moral and physical chaos the lower classes fell into in the modern city….It was the instinctive reaction of the business class to respond with efforts to bring order to the urban world they inhabited.” —Don H.
  • Blood Meridian Or the Evening Redness in the West Dianne C

    Blood Meridian Or the Evening Redness in the West Dianne C

    European journal of American studies 12-3 | 2017 Special Issue of the European Journal of American Studies: Cormac McCarthy Between Worlds Electronic version URL: https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12252 DOI: 10.4000/ejas.12252 ISSN: 1991-9336 Publisher European Association for American Studies Electronic reference European journal of American studies, 12-3 | 2017, “Special Issue of the European Journal of American Studies: Cormac McCarthy Between Worlds” [Online], Online since 27 November 2017, connection on 08 July 2021. URL: https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12252; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/ejas. 12252 This text was automatically generated on 8 July 2021. European Journal of American studies 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction: Cormac McCarthy Between Worlds James Dorson, Julius Greve and Markus Wierschem Landscapes as Narrative Commentary in Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian or the Evening Redness in the West Dianne C. Luce The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming” Mark Seltzer Christ-Haunted: Theology on The Road Christina Bieber Lake On Being Between: Apocalypse, Adaptation, McCarthy Stacey Peebles The Tennis Shoe Army and Leviathan: Relics and Specters of Big Government in The Road Robert Pirro Rugged Resonances: From Music in McCarthy to McCarthian Music Julius Greve and Markus Wierschem Cormac McCarthy and the Genre Turn in Contemporary Literary Fiction James Dorson The Dialectics of Mobility: Capitalism and Apocalypse in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road Simon Schleusener Affect and Gender
  • In the Wake of the Sun: Navigating the Southern Works of Cormac Mccarthy © 2009 by Christopher J

    In the Wake of the Sun: Navigating the Southern Works of Cormac Mccarthy © 2009 by Christopher J

    In the Wake of the Sun Navigating the Southern Works of Cormac McCarthy Christopher J. Walsh In the Wake of the Sun In the Wake of the Sun Navigating the Southern Works of Cormac McCarthy Christopher J. Walsh Newfound Press THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE LIBRARIES, KNOXVILLE In the Wake of the Sun: Navigating the Southern Works of Cormac McCarthy © 2009 by Christopher J. Walsh Digital version at www.newfoundpress.utk.edu/pubs/walsh Newfound Press is a digital imprint of the University of Tennessee Libraries. Its publications are available for non-commercial and educational uses, such as research, teaching and private study. The author has licensed the work under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/>. For all other uses, contact: Newfound Press University of Tennessee Libraries 1015 Volunteer Boulevard Knoxville, TN 37996-1000 www.newfoundpress.utk.edu ISBN-13: 978-0-9797292-7-0 ISBN-10: 0-9797292-7-0 Walsh, Christopher J., 1968- In the wake of the sun : navigating the southern works of Cormac McCarthy / by Christopher J. Walsh. Knoxville, Tenn. : Newfound Press, University of Tennessee Libraries, c2009. xxiii, 376 p. : digital, PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. [357]-376). 1. McCarthy, Cormac, 1933- -- Criticism and interpretation. I. Title. PS3563.C337 Z943 2009 Book and cover design by Jayne Rogers Cover image by Andi Pantz I dedicate this book to my mother, Maureen Lillian Walsh, and to the memory of my father, Peter Anthony Walsh (1934-2000), as their hard work and innumerable sacrifices made all of this possible.
  • The Southern Literary Influences of Cormac Mccarthy and How They

    The Southern Literary Influences of Cormac Mccarthy and How They

    Brandeis University Waltham Massachusetts Department of English Myth, Legend, Dust: The Southern Literary Influences of Cormac McCarthy and How They Portend the Evening Redness in the West Benjamin Rui-Lin Fong Advisor: John Burt A thesis submitted to the faculty of Brandeis University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in English May 2018 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank my advisor and mentor, the bardic John Burt, who was my first English professor at Brandeis and whose intellectual guidance and comments have helped shape every part of this thesis. Professor Burt’s Southern Literature course led to my first encounter with Blood Meridian. His lecture on Milton’s Satan and Judge Holden inspired this three-year obsession with Cormac McCarthy. I would like to thank Jerome Tharaud who has been a particularly inspirational professor and mentor whose guidance, enthusiasm, and instruction sparked my love for American literature. He has been particularly helpful in his advice on balancing thesis work and my applications to graduate school. I would like to thank Kurt Cavender who encouraged a UWS student to take more English classes (and who spent his own time to nominate me for an award). I would like to thank Pu Wang whose lectures on tragedy and modernity inspired me to pursue the Knoxville portions of this thesis. Lastly, I would like to thank Emma Smith. Our talks about Shakespeare have stayed in my mind, and Shakespeare’s language, stories, and characters come to mind every day. Finally, I would like to thank my family, whose love and support have spanned continents.
  • Mccarthy Cormac

    Mccarthy Cormac

    A Guide to the Cormac McCarthy Papers 1964-2007 Collection 091 Descriptive Summary Creator: Cormac McCarthy Title: The Cormac McCarthy Papers Dates: 1964-2007 Abstract: The Cormac McCarthy Papers span 1964-2007 and document the literary career of one of America’s most celebrated authors. The collection is arranged in two series: Published Works and Unpublished Works. The bulk of the collection is Published Works. Novels and produced plays and screenplays represented include: The Orchard Keeper; Outer Dark; Child of God; The Gardener’s Son; Suttree; Blood Meridian; All the Pretty Horses; The Crossing; The Stonemason; Cities of the Plain; No Country for Old Men; the Road; and The Sunset Limited. Unpublished Works include the screenplay, “Whales and Men,” and an unfinished novel “The Passenger.” NOTE: “The Passenger” is restricted until after novel is published. Identification: Collection 091 Extent: 98 boxes (46 linear feet) Language: English. Repository: Southwestern Writers Collection, The Wittliff Collections, Alkek Library, Texas State University-San Marcos Cormac McCarthy Papers SWWC Collection 091 Biographical Sketch Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and playwright, Cormac McCarthy, was born Charles McCarthy, Jr., on July 20, 1933, in Providence, Rhode Island. He was the third of six children born to Charles and Gladys McCarthy, preceded by sisters Jackie and Bobbie, and followed by Bill, Maryellen, and Dennis. In 1937, his parents moved the family to Knoxville, Tennessee, where his father was employed as a lawyer with the Tennessee Valley Authority. McCarthy spent much of his life in Tennessee, and his early works are clearly influenced by that region. His first four published novels, The Orchard Keeper (1965), Outer Dark (1968), Child of God (1973), and Suttree (1979), reflect the culture, myth and character of East Tennessee and Appalachia.
  • Suttree and Blood Meridian in Translation

    Suttree and Blood Meridian in Translation

    TRAN 6476S-90: WORKSHOP ON LITERARY AND CULTURAL TOPICS Revised 3/17/08 READING CORMAC McCARTHY IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH: SUTTREE AND BLOOD MERIDIAN IN TRANSLATION Luis Murillo Fort Semester: Spring 2007 Professor: Dr. Michael Scott Doyle Meeting times: W, 5-7:45 Office: COED 423, Tel. 687-4274; [email protected] Location: COED 402 Office Hours: MW 3:30-4:30 and by appointment CONTEXT AND DESCRIPTION. If this myth is tragic, that is because its hero is conscious (. .) The struggle itself toward the heights is enough to fill a man's heart. One must imagine Sisyphus happy. “The Myth of Sisyphus,” Albert Camus The good utopian promises himself to be, primarily, an inexorable realist. Only when he is certain of not having acceded to the least illusion, thus having gained the total view of a reality stripped stark naked, may he, fully arrayed, turn against that reality and strive to reform it, yet acknowledging the impossibility of the task, which is the only sensible approach (. .) To declare its impossibility is not an argument against the possible splendor of the translator’s task. “The Misery and Splendor of Translation,” José Ortega y Gasset Can a translation ever communicate to its readers the understanding of the foreign text that the foreign readers have? “Translation, Community, Utopia,” Lawrence Venuti What will he do with the rebellious text? Isn’t it too much to ask that he also be rebellious, particularly since the text is someone else’s? “The Misery and Splendor of Translation,” José Ortega y Gasset Doyle TRAN 6476 Syllabus Page 2 The task of the translator is surely to work out a strategy that allows the most insistent and decisive effects of that performance to resurface in the translated text and to assume an importance sufficient to suggest the vital status of stratified or contrapuntal writing in the original.
  • Recreates a Universe Governe

    Recreates a Universe Governe

    JOURNAL OF ENGLISH STUDIES - VOLUME 5-6 (2005-2008), 31-46 CORMAC McCARTHY’S GROTESQUE ALLEGORY IN BLOOD MERIDIAN1 MANUEL BRONCANO University of León ABSTRACT. Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian (1985) is one of the major literary works of the twentieth-century. It is an opaque text whose interpretation poses great challenges to the critic. McCarthy deploys a complex narrative strategy which revisits the literary tradition, both American and European, in a collage of genres and modes, from the Puritan sermon to the picaresque, in which the grotesque plays a central role. One of the most controversial aspects of the novel is its religious scope, and criticism seems to be divided between those who find in the novel a theological dimension and those who reject such approach, on the grounds that the nihilist discourse is incompatible with any religious message. This essay argues that McCarthy has consciously constructed, or rather de- constructed, an allegorical narrative whose ultimate aim is to subvert the allegory, with its pattern of temptation-resistance and eventual salvation, into a story of irremediable failure. Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian (1985) recreates a universe governed by the violence of chaos, a world still on the make, emerging from the collision of the primeval elements: water (or its absence), earth, air, and fire. The landscape is wilderness or desert, and humans play a secondary role in the great farcical (tragic) comedy of life. Man is just another creature striving for survival, a humble member of the bestiary that populates the novel. In the waterless wastelands of the Southwest the only liquid that abounds is blood, blood that mixes with dust, making the clay out of which the new human being is modelled.
  • Knoxville & Appalachia in the Works of Cormac Mccarthy

    Knoxville & Appalachia in the Works of Cormac Mccarthy

    1 Knoxville & Appalachia In The Works Of Cormac McCarthy The publication of the newly crowned Pulitzer prize winner The Road in late 2006 marks an imaginative homecoming for Cormac McCarthy. On a literal level McCarthy has returned to the setting of his first four novels, and of course to his childhood home of Knoxville, East Tennessee and Appalachia. However, the acclaimed Border Trilogy and the 2005 novel No Country For Old Men are infused with the myths, culture, humor and indeed violence of his native soil, and Knoxville and Appalachia have consistently informed one of the most unique and challenging voices at work today in Southern and American fiction. The Road has very much bought McCarthy’s career full circle. Indeed, more than just signal an imaginative homecoming, the novel even suggests that the region affords an opportunity for regeneration and rebirth – those sacrosanct American myths – in a world where all other physical, cultural and spatial markers have quite simply been destroyed. In order to illuminate The Road and McCarthy’s southern body of work, I will provide some brief biographical information, as well as addressing the key themes and issues which we can find in his Southern novels. I would also like to incorporate the work of the southern literary scholar Richard Gray who, in his excellent study Southern Aberrations, asks important questions about the issues which inform the construction of Southern literary and cultural identity. Furthermore, I would also like to briefly consider the myth and history of Knoxville and East Tennessee, narrative modes which have done much to inform McCarthy’s work.
  • ANALYSIS Outer Dark (1968) Cormac Mccarthy (1933- ) “In 1968

    ANALYSIS Outer Dark (1968) Cormac Mccarthy (1933- ) “In 1968

    ANALYSIS Outer Dark (1968) Cormac McCarthy (1933- ) “In 1968 Random House published Outer Dark, again to generally strong reviews. Thomas Lask, in the New York Times, wrote, ‘Cormac McCarthy’s second novel, Outer Dark, combines the mythic and the actual in a perfectly executed work of the imagination. He has made the fabulous real, the ordinary mysterious. It is as if Elizabeth Madox Roberts’s The Time of Man, with its earthbound folkways and inarticulate people, had been mated with one of Isak Dineson’s gothic tales.’ Guy Davenport, in his New York Times Book Review article, also drew the connection to Dineson, adding, ‘Nor does Mr. McCarthy waste a single word on his characters’ thoughts. With total objectivity he describes what they do and records their speech. Such discipline comes not only from mastery over words but from an understanding wise enough and compassionate enough to dare to tell so abysmally dark a story.’ Walter Sullivan, another early supporter but also a consistently demanding critic of McCarthy, noted in Sewanee Review, ‘There is no way to overstate the power, the absolute literary virtuosity, with which McCarthy draws his scenes. He writes about the finite world with an accuracy so absolute that his characters give the impression of a universality which they have no right to claim…. It is the way of the good writer to find the universal in the particular, for finally it is the universal that he seeks. McCarthy, on the other hand, seems to love the singular for its own sake: he appears to seek out those devices and people and situations that will engage us by their very strangeness.’ He concluded, ‘There is no way to avoid grappling with the intractable reality that surrounds us.