June 28, 2024

From Gerald R. Lucas
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Taking yesterday off has messed me up a bit. It’s not that I’m behind on my work, but it feels odd to have not done any on a Thursday. That said, I’m glad Kip was able to come for a couple of days; we had a great time, sampling what Austin has to offer a couple of 50-somethings. Now, it’s back to it.

In the “Friends” folder of Box 534, I found a couple of mentions “Yoga.” In an undated letter (ca. January 1958) she asks about “Yoga”: “it’s a good story about something that matters but neither of us can figure out the purpose of the point-of-view device you used. Who the hell is ‘I.” Mailer responds on February 13, 1958:

Mailer’s comment sounds much like his letter from October 17, 1956 a part of which I posted a couple of days ago. However, the gold here is Mailer’s interpretation of the narrator as superego—something akin to the homeostatic or homeodynamic or, as we write in Lipton’s, “the individual essence that often stands opposed to social order and conformity.” Later, in Lipton’s, Mailer compares the H to the idwhich becomes the censor, the resistance” to the societal forces that seek to control and repress it. So in this sense, the narrator is the voice of the H which becomes the resistance to Sam’s quotidian life.

Box 535 is correspondence from 1959, and one of the first folders concerns the publication of Advertisements for Myself. One of the originals tories that Mailer wrote for this collection is “The Time of Her Time,” and of course there is some questions about its appropriateness for publication. Mailer writes fourteen critics[1] for their opinions, and thanks them with a version of the following:

See also my notes to Box 158. There are various other reactions to “Her Time,” but this excerpt from Lionel Trilling’s letter, undated but likely from July 1959, is quite good:

Conveniently, the critics’ responses are then collected in a document. These could prove useful in my writing on the story.



note

  1. Robert Gorham Davis, Norman Podhoretz, Richard Chase, F. W. Dupee, Alfred Kazin, Irving Howe, Philip Rahv, William Barrett, Lionel and Diana Trilling, Dwight Macdonald, William Phillips, and Leslie Fiedler are the ones I found. I’m not sure who the missing one is.