Society in Flashlight: Analyzing Joseph Heller's Catch-22 - János Kávássy - 書籍 - VDM Verlag Dr. Müller - 9783639014716 - 2008年5月23日
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Society in Flashlight: Analyzing Joseph Heller's Catch-22

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発送予定日 2026年1月8日 - 2026年1月20日
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It has been more than a four and a half decades since Joseph Heller's Catch-22 was first published. By the late summer of 1962 the first book of a previously unknown author became a hit, discussed everywhere in the media. By 1970 the title itself entered the English vernacular on its own right, meaning: "a paradox in law, regulation, or practice that makes one a victim of its provisions no matter what one does". The book is a kind of cross-genre piece of work, and was called a novel, a satire, a war novel or/and a protesting war novel, and even was described as a fable. Form, however, does not relate directly to meaning - so when discussing Catch-22 we should always focus on the meaning of the book. Beside the setting - the Italian air war of World War II, the methods - the trials, hearings and loyalty oaths of the McCarthy era, and the intentions - the anti-war feeling and escapism of the Sixties, Catch-22 is still basically about MAN as a moral being. Faced with a disastrous world and in conflict with a callous society, Heller's hero Yossarian evolves as a kind of moral standard to which we can measure ourselves, and the world we are living in.

メディア 書籍     Paperback Book   (ソフトカバーで背表紙を接着した本)
リリース済み 2008年5月23日
ISBN13 9783639014716
出版社 VDM Verlag Dr. Müller
ページ数 76
寸法 150 × 220 × 10 mm   ·   113 g
言語 英語