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Round 10.Pdf
Cavalier Classic XII Round 10 Page 2 of 10 Tossups I. In addition to his more famous vocation, he was actually a noted chemist, and was one of the discoverers of the aldol reaction. As a composer, he left a 3"d symphony unfinished, and his music was the inspiration for the musical Kimset. One of the turning points in his compositional work was his meeting Mily Balakirev and joining his circle of nationalistic composers. Among his more well- known compositions are Polovtsian Dances and In the Steppes of Central Asia. FTP, who was this member of the Mighty Five most famous for his opera Prince Igor? Answer: Alexander Borodin 2. In this work, James, the neighbor of the main character and the father of a murdered fighter for racial equality, eventually decides to take up that cause. Gertrude, a prostitute, agrees to return home to her family, but flees the night before she is to embark. Absalom is to be executed the day after the novel's end for the murder of James' son, Arthur Jarvis. FTP, what is this novel set in South Africa about Stephen Kumalo's search for his son, the most famous work of Alan Paton? Answer: Cry, the Beloved Country 3. It was first proposed in an 1842 monograph entitled On the Colored light of the binary refracted stars and other celestial bodies, and can be used to estimate the temperature of a gas that is emitting a spectral line. It can also be used to provide accurate measurements of blood flow direction and velocity, and one of its more well known applications results in red and blue shifts. -
Literary Journalism Studies Journalism Literary Return Address: Literary Journalism Studies Literary Journalism Studies Vol
Literary Studies Journalism Return address: Literary Journalism Studies Literary Journalism Studies Vol. 4, No. 1, Spring 2012 State University of New York at Cortland Department of Communication Studies L P.O. Box 2000 J Cortland, New York 13045-0900 S U.S.A. Fear and Vol. 4, No. 1, Spring 2012 2012 Spring 1, No. 4, Vol. Loathing in Las Vegas + 40: Hunter S. a special issue Thompson Published at the Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University 1845 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208, U.S.A. The Journal of the International Association for Literary Journalism Studies S11 LJS cover Final.indd 1 4/3/2012 10:52:56 AM Reprinted with permission of the Hunter S. Thompson Estate. Our cover photo for this issue is a self-portrait taken by Hunter S. Thompson in 1965. It is eerily self-revealing about how he saw himself when he was younger, especially given his inscription on the back side. Contributed by Margaret Har- rell, Thompson’s copy editor at Random House for his volume Hell’s Angels. S11 LJS cover Final.indd 2 4/3/2012 10:52:57 AM Literary Journalism Studies The Journal of the International Association for Literary Journalism Studies Vol. 4, No. 1, Spring 2012 ––––––––––––––––– Information for Contributors 4 Note from the Editor 5 ––––––––––––––––– Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas Forty Years Later: A Special Issue 6 The Two Sides of Hunter S. Thompson by William McKeen 7 “The Right Kind of Eyes”: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas as a Novel of Journalistic Development by Robert Alexander 19 “A Savage Place!” Hunter S. -
A Hunter S. Thompson Bibliography
117 Literary Journalism Studies A HUN T ER S. THOMPSON BIBLIO G RAPHY Prepared by William McKeen BOO K S BY HUN T ER S. THOMPSON Hell’s Angels (New York: Random House, 1967). Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (New York: Random House, 1972). Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail (San Francisco: Straight Arrow, 1973). The Great Shark Hunt(New York: Summit Books, 1979). The Curse of Lono(New York: Bantam Books, 1983). Generation of Swine (New York: Summit Books, 1988). Songs of the Doomed (New York: Summit Books, 1990). Screwjack (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Neville, 1991).* Better than Sex (New York: Random House, 1994). The Proud Highway(New York: Villard Books, 1997). Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Other American Stories (New York: The Modern Library, 1997). Mistah Leary, He Dead (Pasadena, Calif.: X-Ray Publishing, 1997).* The Rum Diary(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1998). Fear and Loathing in America (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2000). Screwjack and Other Stories (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2000). Kingdom of Fear (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2003). Hey Rube (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2004). Fire in the Nuts (Tucson, Ariz.: Sylph Publications, 2004).* Fear and Loathing at Rolling Stone (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2011). The Mutineer (New York: Simon and Schuster, in press). [*] denotes limited edition 118 Literary Journalism Studies BOO K S FEA T URIN G HUN T ER S. THOMPSON (as a character or with an example of his work), with occasional annotations. Acosta, Oscar Zeta. The Autobiography of a Brown Buffalo (San Francisco: Straight Arrow, 1972). -
The Gonzo Text – the Literary Journalism of Hunter Thompson Phd 2013 Matthew Winston
The Gonzo Text – The Literary Journalism of Hunter Thompson PhD 2013 Matthew Winston Declaration This work has not been submitted in substance for any other degree or award at this or any other university or place of learning, nor is being submitted concurrently in candidature for any degree or other award. Signed ....................................... (candidate) Date .............................. STATEMENT 1 This thesis is being submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of PhD. Signed ....................................... (candidate) Date .............................. STATEMENT 2 This thesis is the result of my own independent work/investigation, except where otherwise stated. Other sources are acknowledged by explicit references. The views expressed are my own. Signed ....................................... (candidate) Date .............................. STATEMENT 3 I hereby give consent for my thesis, if accepted, to be available for photocopying and for inter-library loan, and for the title and summary to be made available to outside organisations. Signed ....................................... (candidate) Date .............................. STATEMENT 4: PREVIOUSLY APPROVED BAR ON ACCESS I hereby give consent for my thesis, if accepted, to be available for photocopying and for inter-library loans after expiry of a bar on access previously approved by the Academic Standards & Quality Committee. Signed ....................................... (candidate) Date .............................. ii Abstract More -
Gonzo Journalism As a Vehicle for Social Criticism in the Literary Nonfiction of Hunter S
Student Publications Student Scholarship Spring 2015 A Savage Journey to the Heart of Literary Freedom: Gonzo Journalism as a Vehicle for Social Criticism in the Literary Nonfiction of Hunter S. Thompson Jeffrey J. Horvath Gettysburg College Follow this and additional works at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship Part of the Community-Based Research Commons, Critical and Cultural Studies Commons, English Language and Literature Commons, and the Journalism Studies Commons Share feedback about the accessibility of this item. Horvath, Jeffrey J., "A Savage Journey to the Heart of Literary Freedom: Gonzo Journalism as a Vehicle for Social Criticism in the Literary Nonfiction of Hunter S. Thompson" (2015). Student Publications. 298. https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/298 This is the author's version of the work. This publication appears in Gettysburg College's institutional repository by permission of the copyright owner for personal use, not for redistribution. Cupola permanent link: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/ 298 This open access student research paper is brought to you by The uC pola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of The uC pola. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Savage Journey to the Heart of Literary Freedom: Gonzo Journalism as a Vehicle for Social Criticism in the Literary Nonfiction of Hunter S. Thompson Abstract As a professional journalist Hunter S. Thompson made it his mission to expose and defy structures of American society which he believed inhibited the exercise of personal freedom and, consequently, made realizing the “American Dream” impossible. Through his unique voice and style of literary nonfiction known as “Gonzo Journalism” Thompson is able to debunk the myth of the American Dream by attacking false conceptions of it, thereby highlighting the failures of both these conceptions and the structures of society, politics, class, and authority which give rise to them. -
Hunter S. Thompson, Transmetropolitan, and the Evolution from Author To
Hunter S. Thompson, Transmetropolitan, and the Evolution from Author to Character By Ashlee Amanda Nelson A thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English Literature Victoria University of Wellington 2014 2 Table of Contents Figures Page 3 Acknowledgements Page 4 Abstract Page 5 Introduction Page 7 Chapter One Page 12 Chapter Two Page 38 Chapter Three Page 68 Conclusion Page 95 Works Cited Page 98 3 Figures Fig. 1 p. 41 Spider Jerusalem’s car (Transmetropolitan 1:10) Fig. 2 p. 43 Spider Jerusalem (Transmetropolitan 1:4) and Hunter Thompson (Ancient Gonzo Wisdom) Fig. 3 p. 43 Spider Jerusalem (Transmetropolitan 1:28) and Hunter Thompson as drawn by Ralph Steadman in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (14) Fig. 4 p. 45 Mitchell Royce (Transmetropolitan 1:20) and Jann Wenner (Bazilian) Fig. 5 p. 50 Spider’s articles (Transmetropolitan 4:40) Fig. 6 p. 53 Spider acting out an imaginary conversation (Transmetropolitan 5:12) Fig. 7 p. 57 “The Beast” (Transmetropolitan 1:94) Fig. 8 p. 60 The “The Smiler” (Transmetropolitan 3:45) Fig. 9 p. 82 Spider’s article (Transmetropolitan 1:65) Fig. 10 p. 83 Spider’s journalism (Transmetropolitan 3:53) Fig. 11 p. 84 Fonts and speech box styles (Transmetropolitan 5:63-64) Fig. 12 p. 86 Spider’s interviews with the homeless (Transmetropolitan 7:106) Fig. 13 p. 87 Spider’s article juxtaposed against him writing it (Transmetropolitan 7:109) Fig. 14 p. 88 Article by Spider (Transmetropolitan 5:38) Fig. 15 p. -
Hunter S. Thompson: His Last Shotgun Art
Hunter S. Thompson: His Last Shotgun Art. No More Fear And Loathing In Woody Creek. Uncle Duke From: Gary Trudeau – Doonesbury Hunter S. Thompson, the counter culture ‘gonzo’ journalist, died on February 20, 2005 by a weapon of his choice. The inventor of Shotgun Art and Shotgun Golf fatally shot himself at his Owl Creek farm in Woody Creek, Colorado. He was 67. ‘Prince of Gonzo’ he called himself, ‘Doctor Gonzo’, ‘Doctor of Journalism’, ‘Outlaw Journalist’, ‘Doc’, ‘The Duke’: Hunter Stockton Thompson (Louisville, Kentucky, 1939). Rock star of the written word. And as with rock stars meeting one is never an easy task. But we managed, once, after endless waiting and drinking our way into the local bar, The Woody Creek tavern. The sun was already sinking behind the Rocky Mountains, bathing the area around the Tavern in a chill and cheerless light, when finally the great Doctor made his appearance. Five in the morning would have been a more approriate time. Word had it that Thompson was burned out. That, battle weary, he’d given up on the Gonzo cause. Gonzo comes from the French-Canadian word gonzeaux which means something along the lines of shining path. Hunter Thompson was that path; the only fully fledged grand master of Gonzo. His Gonzo style was often confused with New Journalism, made famous by Tom Wolfe and Gay Talese. But that is quite incorrect. Wolfe and the like attack the truth with the techniques of the novelist. They lose themselves in the minds of their subjects. Thompson lost himself in his own mind, and traced only his own madcap, hallucinatory journey through the many events in his stories. -
1 Masteroppgave I Engelsk Hunter S. Thompson and Gonzo Journalism
Masteroppgave i Engelsk Hunter S. Thompson and Gonzo Journalism Av Frode Vågsdalen Masteroppgaven er gjennomført som et ledd i utdanningen ved Universitetet i Agder og er godkjent som sådan. Denne godkjenningen innebærer ikke at universitetet innestår for de metoder som er anvendt og de konklusjoner som er trukket. Veileder: Michael J. Prince Universitetet i Agder, Kristiansand Vår 2008 1 Acknowledgements I would like to thank my advisor Michael J. Prince for feedback and pep talks whenever circumstance demanded it. Thank you for supporting me through the project and for guiding me ashore. My fellow students have inspired me tremendously over the last two years, and our conversations and support at the study hall have been of invaluable importance when the going has been tough. Thank you all. The process of writing a master thesis takes its toll on both student as well as surroundings, and there has been made sacrifices on both sides. Family and social life has been replaced with a considerable amount of hours in front of books and computers, but what an interesting ride it’s been….after all. 2 So we shall let the reader answer the question for himself. Who is the happier man, he who has braved the storm of life and lived, 1 or he who has stayed securely on shore and merely existed? 1 Carroll: 1993: 279 3 Introduction __________________________________________________________________5 Literary Journalism, New Journalism and Gonzo Journalism __________________________9 Hell’s Angels: the Strange and Terrible Saga Of the Outlaw Motorcycle -
Hunter S. Thompson and the Sixties
Ghent University Faculty of Arts and Philosophy 2009-2010 Hunter S. Thompson and the Sixties Fear and Loathing in Retrospect Supervisor: May 2010 Paper submitted in partial Prof. Dr. Ilka Saal fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of “Master in de Vergelijkende Moderne Letterkunde” By Catherine Kosters 2 3 Foreword There are many people I would to thank for their help in the realization of this dissertation. First and foremost, I am thankful to my supervisor, Prof. Dr. Ilka Saal, without whom I never would have succeeded. Her confidence, support, academic guidance, and useful commentary and suggestions have contributed greatly to my work. Furthermore, special thanks to her are in order for tending a light in the occasional darkness of Jamesonian thought. I am extremely grateful to Dries De Herdt, for his loving encouragement, structural remarks and knowledge of politics. My mother, Rose-Marie Vleugels, I would like to thank for her interest and revisions. I further appreciate the support I received from all my friends and family. I am thankful in particular to Nele Augustyns, Inneke Baatsen, and Lien Smets for the efforts they put in borrowing books for me from various libraries; and to Kerry Oxlade, who introduced me to the author who has become the main subject of my thesis. Finally, I am infinitely obliged to the late great HST. “No sympathy for the devil; keep that in mind. Buy the ticket, take the ride.” 4 Table of Contents Foreword................................................................................................................3 Table of Contents....................................................................................................4 1. Introduction........................................................................................................6 2. The Sixties: A Time of Revolutio.n....................................................................12 2.1. -
The Genesis of the Hunter Figure: a Study of the Dialectic Between the Biographical and the Aesthetic in the Early Writings of Hunter S
The Genesis of the Hunter Figure: A study of the Dialectic between the Biographical and the Aesthetic in the Early Writings of Hunter S. Thompson Rory Feehan Student Number: 0026492 Ph.D. Thesis Mary Immaculate College University of Limerick Supervisor: Dr Eugene O’Brien Submitted to Mary Immaculate College: ______________________ Declaration of Originality Declaration: I hereby declare that this thesis is the result of my own original research and does not contain the work of any other individual. All sources that have been consulted have been identified and acknowledged in the appropriate way. Signature of Candidate: ___________________________________ Rory Feehan Date: ___________________________________ ii Acknowledgements Firstly, I would like to express my sincere respect and appreciation to my supervisor, Dr Eugene O’Brien, for his support of this project from its very inception and for his endless patience and wisdom throughout the journey of completing this work. I would also like to thank Dr John McDonagh, Dr Kathryn Laing and Ms Florence O’Connor, for all that I learned from them during my undergraduate at Mary Immaculate College and also for their sound advice and guidance during my time working alongside them as a tutor in the English Department. I would also like to thank Professor William McKeen for agreeing to serve as external supervisor for this project, his work has been a great source of inspiration to me throughout the process. I would like to thank Dr Stephen Thornton, Dr David Blake and Dr Chris Lawn for their encouragement and support of my research. Special thanks to Dr Matteo Cullen and Dr John Harnett for the confidence they continually expressed in my work and the much needed banter that made the long days and late nights writing that much more bearable. -
LSD, Mules and Men: Hypermediation in Hunter S. Thompson and Zora Neale Hurston
AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Harold R. Collins III for the degree of Master of Arts in English presented on May 25, 2016. Title: LSD, Mules and Men: Hypermediation in Hunter S. Thompson and Zora Neale Hurston. Abstract approved: ______________________________________________________ Raymond J. Malewitz Hypermediation, as described by Jay Bolter and Richard Grusin in their book Remediation, is a style of writing, recording, presenting, etc. that “makes us aware of the medium or media and (in sometimes subtle and sometimes obvious ways) reminds us of our desire for immediacy” (34). This mode of production reveals and illustrates the manufactured nature of writing and the processes that go into it, thereby increasing the perceived authenticity and immediacy of the text. In my paper, I investigate a chapter in Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and several scenes in Zora Neale Hurston’s Mules and Men. Ultimately, I determine that while these authors focus on the produced nature of their texts in various ways (editor’s notes that call attention to modes of production, narrative frames that contrast the slightly less mediated areas of their texts, and approximations of oral narratives/recordings that push the limits of the print format), the intentions and effects from each author are entirely different. While Thompson increases his ethos to other white, male dope users by illustrating his own gonzo persona, Hurston’s text portrays her in a way that increases her authority to a middle-class white audience not familiar with black folk tales and songs that had existed primarily as an oral tradition up to this point. -
A Brain Full of Contraband: the Islamic Gonzo Writing of Michael Muhammad Knight
91 A Brain Full of Contraband: The Islamic Gonzo Writing of Michael Muhammad Knight Brian J. Bowe Grand Valley State University, U.S.A. The narrative punk rock Muslim writings of Michael Muhammad Knight can be examined through the lens of Hunter S. Thompson’s Gonzo journalism. One result is a conceptual definition of Gonzo journalism. ver the past forty-plus years, the term “Gonzo” has insinuated itself into Oeveryday usage. What began as a style of writing rooted in 1960s drug- fueled counterculture has been transformed into the name of a popular Mup- pet, a style of marketing,1 a realistic genre of participant-filmed pornography,2 and a lecture style used in higher education business courses.3 The precise origins of the term are shrouded in myth and difficult to determine with any certainty.4 A common etymology of the term places it in Irish South Boston slang that denotes “those who use craziness as a form of self-expression, who push it too far just to push it.”5 Other synonyms include insane, wild, bizarre, confused, unrestrained, and extravagant.6 What is clear is that the term is inextricably linked to the writing of Hunter S. Thompson, who is universally acknowledged as the originator of Gonzo journalism. Since the term was coined in 1970, many writers have adopted a similar visceral, over-the-top first-person approach to storytelling. One such writer, Michael Muhammad Knight, first arrived on the literary scene in 2004 with a rude indie novel titled The Taqwacoresbefore turning to a series of first-person nonfiction books.