Zelda

Zelda

“Profound, overwhelmingly moving . . . a richly complex love story.” — New York Times Acclaimed biographer Nancy Milford brings to life the tormented, elusive personality of Zelda Sayre and clarifies as never before Zelda’s ...

Author: Nancy Milford

Publisher: Harper Collins

ISBN: 9780062032461

Category: Biography & Autobiography

Page: 464

View: 136

“Profound, overwhelmingly moving . . . a richly complex love story.” — New York Times Acclaimed biographer Nancy Milford brings to life the tormented, elusive personality of Zelda Sayre and clarifies as never before Zelda’s relationship with her husband F. Scott Fitzgerald—tracing the inner disintegration of a gifted, despairing woman, torn by the clash between her husband’s career and her own talent. Zelda Sayre’s stormy life spanned from notoriety as a spirited Southern beauty to success as a gifted novelist and international celebrity at the side of her husband, F. Scott Fitzgerald. Zelda and Fitzgerald were one of the most visible couples of the Jazz Age, inhabiting and creating around them a world of excitement, romance, art, and promise. Yet their tumultuous relationship precipitated a descent into depression and mental instability for Zelda, leaving her to spend the final twenty years of her life in hospital care, until a fire at a sanitarium claimed her life. Incorporating years of exhaustive research and interviews, Milford illuminates Zelda’s nuanced and elusive personality, giving character to both her artistic vibrancy and to her catastrophic collapse.
Categories: Biography & Autobiography

The Biography Book

The Biography Book

Zelda : A Biography . New York : Harper & Row , 1970. 424pp . The most comprehensive and reliable full - length portrait of Zelda Fitzgerald based on extensive interviews . Milford challenges the glamour surrounding the Fitzgeralds to ...

Author: Daniel S. Burt

Publisher: Greenwood Publishing Group

ISBN: 1573562564

Category: Biography

Page: 650

View: 502

Contains alphabetically arranged entries that identify and assess the biographical materials available on over five hundred notable historical figures, listing autobiography and primary sources, recommended biographies and juvenile biographies, other biographical studies, biographical novels, fictional portraits, and biographical films and theatrical adaptations.
Categories: Biography

Towards a Theory of Life Writing

Towards a Theory of Life Writing

another biographical fiction about that period of Fitzgerald's life. ... It is interesting that the first lengthy biography of either of the two is about Zelda Fitzgerald, published by Nancy Milford in 1970, called Zelda: A Biography.

Author: Marija Krsteva

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

ISBN: 9781000832242

Category: Biography & Autobiography

Page: 155

View: 211

Towards a Theory of Life-Writing: Genre Blending provides a look into the rules of life-writing genre blending proposing a theory to explain and illustrate the main regulations governing such genre play. It centers on fact and fiction duality in the formation of auto/biofictional genres. This book investigates the existing developments in this field, and explores major criticism and lines of inquiry in order to arrive at the theory of life-writing genre play textuality. The specific interplay of the different generic characteristics develops a specific textuality at the heart of it. This is termed biofictional preservation (biopreservation) to explain the textual transformation and the shaping of the auto/biofictional genres. Written for undergraduate and graduate students, but also for the general readers, the book further exemplifies the theory in the analyses of different biofictions about the American authors F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway featuring overlapping and juxtaposed material. This volume aims to provide a theory of this specific textuality in order to better understand and approach the process in question as well as to open up new horizons for further study and exploration.
Categories: Biography & Autobiography

Zelda Fitzgerald

Zelda Fitzgerald

Zelda Fitzgerald was the mythical American Dream Girl of the Roaring Twenties who became, in the words of her husband, F. Scott Fitzgerald, “the first American flapper.” Their romance transformed a symbol of glamour and spectacle of the ...

Author: Sally Cline

Publisher: Skyhorse

ISBN: 9781611459630

Category: Biography & Autobiography

Page: 496

View: 623

Zelda Fitzgerald was the mythical American Dream Girl of the Roaring Twenties who became, in the words of her husband, F. Scott Fitzgerald, “the first American flapper.” Their romance transformed a symbol of glamour and spectacle of the Jazz Age. When Zelda cracked up, not long after the stock market crash of 1929, Scott remained loyal to her through a nightmare of later breakdowns and final madness. Sally Cline brings us a trenchantly authentic voice through Zelda’s own highly autobiographical writings and hundreds of letters she wrote to friends and family, publishers and others. New medical evidence and interviews with Zelda’s last psychiatrist suggest that her “insanity” may have been less a specific clinical condition than the product of the treatment she endured for schizophrenia and her husband’s devastating alcoholism. In narrating Zelda’s tumultuous life, Cline vividly evokes the circle of Jazz Age friends that included Edmund Wilson, Ernest Hemingway, John Dos Passos, Dorothy Parker, Lillian Hellman, and H. L. Mencken. Her exhaustive research and incisive analysis animate a profoundly moving portrait of Zelda and provide a convincing context to the legacy of her tragedy.
Categories: Biography & Autobiography

Zelda Fitzgerald

Zelda Fitzgerald

Author: Nancy Winston Milford

Publisher:

ISBN: OCLC:64457730

Category:

Page: 470

View: 766

Categories:

The Romance of Regionalism in the Work of F Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald

The Romance of Regionalism in the Work of F  Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald

The first biography of Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald was published in 1970, thirty-two years after she died in a fire at Highland Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina. The second appeared only a year later in 1971. The first, by Nancy Milford ...

Author: Kirk Curnutt

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

ISBN: 9781666909173

Category: Literary Criticism

Page: 341

View: 426

At the height of their fame, F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald dramatized their relationship as a charming romance of regionalism, a Northern man’s pursuit of a Southern belle. This collection of thirteen essays reveals that tensions between sectionalism and nationalism run much deeper in their work than previously appreciated.
Categories: Literary Criticism

American Biography

American Biography

ZELDA FITZGERALD 58 According to Ms. Milford and Ms. Taylor, Zelda often said she had no friends, yet Ms. Cline insists Zelda had important women friends whom earlier biographers rarely mention. But Ms. Taylor does deal with this ...

Author: Carl Rollyson

Publisher: iUniverse

ISBN: 9780595828081

Category: Biography & Autobiography

Page: 302

View: 528

This collection of reviews, selected from Rollyson's New York Sun column, is as much about the romance of biography as it is about the American lives. Certain concerns resonate throughout the book: the American left's failure to reckon with Communist subversion, McCarthyism, and Stalinism, the problematic nature of authorized biography, the history of American biography, definitive biographies, literary biography, the differences between autobiography and biography, the importance of interviews in biographies of contemporary figures, the differences between history and biography, comparative biographies, the virtues of short biographies and of biographies for children, the tendency of biographers to fictionalize and of novelists to biographize, psychology and biography, Rollyson's own experience as a biographer, and the way biographers treat one another's work. Too many biographers, he believes, evince no interest in the biographical tradition. Concerned only with possession of their subjects, their proprietorial attitude deforms not only their biographies but also the genre itself. If biography is reviewed badly (receiving hardly more than a summary of the subject's life with a perfunctory nod to the biographer), it is because the biographical tradition has been disregarded or discounted. This book, in other words, has been written on the behalf of biography, a genre that still awaits a full vindication.
Categories: Biography & Autobiography

Reading Biography

Reading Biography

But Ms. Cline strains to keep Zelda sane, referring as briefly as she can to the fact that Zelda was ... The argument that Scott drove Zelda to madness by appropriating her life in his fiction (she was a model for Daisy Buchanan in “The ...

Author: Carl Rollyson

Publisher: iUniverse

ISBN: 9780595337477

Category: Biography & Autobiography

Page: 89

View: 691

Most book reviewers know very little about the history or the art of biography. Indeed, if there is any art in biography, it is the rare reviewer that acknowledges it or knows how to discuss it. Usually the reviewer regards biography as an occasion to wax eloquent about what he or she thinks of the subject. Little space, if any, is devoted to the biography's structure or style, to the biographer's peculiar problems, or to how the biography relates to others about the same subject. Carl Rollyson, a professional biographer and weekly columnist (On Biography) for The New York Sun, explores the ramifications of authorized and unauthorized biographies, investigates the relationship between biography and history, biography and fiction, biography and autobiography, as well commenting on certain perennial biographical subjects such as Napoleon, on sub genres such as children's biography, and on the most recent developments in life writing. Rollyson's aim is to reach not merely scholars but that vast general audience addicted to reading biography, enhancing their pleasure by providing insight (or you might say, the inside word) on how biographies are put together.
Categories: Biography & Autobiography

Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald

Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald

Linda Wagner-Martin's Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald is a twenty-first century story.

Author: Linda Wagner-Martin

Publisher: Springer

ISBN: 9780230597914

Category: Fiction

Page: 251

View: 315

Linda Wagner-Martin's Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald is a twenty-first century story. Using cultural and gender studies as contexts, Wagner-Martin brings new information to the story of the Alabama judge's daughter who, at seventeen, met her husband-to-be, Scott Fitzgerald. Swept away from her stable home life into Jazz Age New York and Paris, Zelda eventually learned to be a writer and a painter; and she came close to being a ballerina. An evocative portrayal of a talented woman's professional and emotional conflicts, this study contains extensive notes and new photographs.
Categories: Fiction

Zelda Fitzgerald

Zelda Fitzgerald

Zelda Fitzgerald, along with her husband F. Scott Fitzgerald, is remembered above all else as a personification of the style and glamour of the roaring twenties - an age of carefree affluence such as the world has not seen since.

Author: Sally Cline

Publisher: Faber & Faber

ISBN: 9780571309399

Category: Biography & Autobiography

Page: 528

View: 657

Zelda Fitzgerald, along with her husband F. Scott Fitzgerald, is remembered above all else as a personification of the style and glamour of the roaring twenties - an age of carefree affluence such as the world has not seen since. But along with the wealth and parties came a troubled mind, at a time when a woman exploiting her freedom of expression was likely to attract accusations of insanity. After 1934 Zelda spent most of her life in a mental institution; outliving her husband by few years, she died in a fire as she was awaiting electroconvulsive therapy in a sanatorium. Zelda's story has often been told by detractors, who would cast her as a parasite in the marriage - most famously, Ernest Hemingway accused her of taking pleasure in blunting her husband's genius; when she wrote her autobiographical novel, Fitzgerald himself complained she had used his material. But was this fair, when Fitzgerald's novels were based on their life together? Sally Cline's biography, first published in 2003, makes use of letters, journals, and doctor's records to detail the development of their marriage, and to show the collusion between husband and doctors in a misdirected attempt to 'cure' Zelda's illness. Their prescription - no dancing, no painting, and above all, no writing - left her creative urges with no outlet, and was bound to make matters worse for a woman who thrived on the expression of allure and wealth.
Categories: Biography & Autobiography