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Journal Article

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2025
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Overview
While it can be tempting to speculate on what sort of fiction Roth would be producing now-we think a sequel to Our Gang (1971) might sell a few copies-we still have his thirty-two books to keep us busy as readers and critics, as demonstrated by the essays in this issue. James Duban's essay \"Sartre's What is Writing? and Nathan Zuckerman's Existential 'Situations' in I Married a Communist\" presents a thoughtful study of Roth's engagement with Sartre's work, and in making the case for Roth's implicit critique of Sartre's shifting views after World War Two, also offers a new way of thinking about the intersection of politics and literature in Roth's fiction. Rounding out the issue are two book reviews by Brett Ashley Kaplan and Mark Krasovic as well as the annual bibliography of Roth studies compiled by Joseph Ozias, all of which demonstrate how Roth continues to generate robust and thoughtful scholarship.
Publisher
Purdue University Press