Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Getting Off the Page
2. How to Misbehave as aBehaviorist (if You’re Wyndham Lewis)
3. Erskine Caldwell, Smut, and the Paperbacking of Obscenity
4. Sin, Sex, and Segregation in Lillian Smith’s Silent South
Conclusion: Off the Page
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Erik M. Bachman is Lecturer of Literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz and coeditor of the Lukács Library at Brill.
“A profound reassessment not only of American censorship issues,
Literary Obscenities joins the current rethinking of modernist
studies, particularly in terms of the paperback revolution and its
long-term cultural impact. This welcome addition to the ongoing
discourse in legal studies, book history, cultural studies, and the
philosophy of modernism is cause for celebration. Bachman’s
well-researched, acutely insightful, accessibly written study will
take its place alongside Marjorie Heins’s Not in Front of the
Children as a staple in university courses.”—S. E. Gontarski,
author of Creative Involution: Bergson, Beckett, Deleuze
“Provides a historical framework and literary context for perhaps
better understanding modern, printed-words-only obscenity
prosecutions and why they are now so rare.”—Clay Calvert Criminal
Law and Criminal Justice Books
“[Bachman] offers a historical perspective on modernism and
literary naturalism and shrewdly covers the relationship between
what is on the page and how readers respond to it.”—D. C. Greenwood
Choice
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