Morris Dickstein

Morris Dickstein teaches English and theater at the Graduate Center of
the City University of New York. His most recent book is A Mirror in the
Roadway: Literature and the Real World
(Princeton).

The Nijinsky of Ambivalence The Nijinsky of Ambivalence

During a Vietnam War protest, Norman Mailer blustered and banged a generation's experience through his prodigious ego.

Nov 21, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Morris Dickstein

The Shock of the Old The Shock of the Old

These remarks introduced a centennial tribute to Isaac Bashevis Singer in October at the 92nd Street Y in New York.

Nov 24, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Morris Dickstein

Mary McCarthy at 90 Mary McCarthy at 90

Mary McCarthy would have turned 90 on June 21, a fact that is itself astonishing to those who remember her flagrant youth, when her sharp style made her the most feared and forthri...

Aug 15, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Morris Dickstein

Don’t Call It Night Don’t Call It Night

In the United States the writer tends to become an entrepreneur, competing with other literary vendors marketing their characters and language, their humor or drama, to a skeptic...

Jan 3, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Morris Dickstein

The Complex Fate of the Jewish-American Writer The Complex Fate of the Jewish-American Writer

The conflict between Roth and Howe was partly temperamental, but some of it was generational.

Oct 4, 2001 / Books & the Arts / Morris Dickstein

The Complex Fate of the Jewish-American Writer The Complex Fate of the Jewish-American Writer

As early as the 1960s, influential critics argued that American Jewish writing no longer counted as a distinct or viable literary project, for younger Jews had grown so ass...

Oct 4, 2001 / Books & the Arts / Morris Dickstein

x