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Overview"An impetuous outsider who delighted in confronting American hypocrisy and prudery, Barney Rosset liberated American culture from the constraints of Puritanism. As the head of Grove Press, he single-handedly broke down the laws against obscenity, changing forever the nature of writing and publishing in this country. He brought to the reading public the European avant-garde, among them Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter, radical political and literary voices such as Malcolm X, Che Guevara, and Jack Kerouac, steamy Victorian erotica, and banned writers such as D. H. Lawrence, Henry Miller, and William Burroughs. His almost mystical belief in the sacrosanct nature of the First Amendment essentially demarcates the before and after of American publishing. Barney explores how Grove's landmark legal victories freed publishers to print what they wanted, and it traces Grove's central role in the countercultural ferment of the sixties and early seventies. Drawing on the Rosset papers at Columbia University and personal interviews with former Grove Press staff members, friends, and wives, it tells the fascinating story of this feisty, abrasive, visionary, and principled cultural revolutionary-a modern ""Huckleberry Finn"" according to Nobel Prizewinning novelist Kenzaburo Oe-who altered the reading habits of a nation." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael RosenthalPublisher: Arcade Publishing Imprint: Arcade Publishing Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.376kg ISBN: 9781628726503ISBN 10: 1628726504 Pages: 232 Publication Date: 23 March 2017 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsWe're still benefiting from the freedoms that we have because of what Barney Rosset did . . . and the battles he fought. John Waters, quoted from the documentary <i>Obscene</i> Barney Rosset to me represents the literary world of the latter half of the 20th century. . . . No amount of words will be adequate to express my gratitude to Barney Rosset. Kenzaburo Oe Barney Rosset was not an anonymous publisher for me. When I speak about my publisher in New York I never say 'Grove Press, ' I always say 'Barney Rosset.' Jean Genet Barney Rosset, whose guts and wisdom made it possible for me to read Beckett and all the other writers published by Grove, the one-in-a-million Barney Rosset, America's bravest publisher. Paul Auster [A] splendid and marvelously animated biography . . . Mr. Rosenthal has written a wonderful book. <i>Wall Street Journal</i> (on <i>Nicholas Miraculous</i>) Diverting and meticulous . . . He writes with an historian's sense of context. Christopher Hitchens, <i>Washington Post</i> (on <i>The Character Factory</i>) Barney Rosset was one of the most important American cultural figures of the twentieth century. This marvelous book brilliantly captures his and our struggles to allow all Americans to read, hear and see what the Constitution demands. He, with much turbulence, anxiety, and pain, nearly alone broke the barriers of censorship. --Martin Garbus, Esq. We're still benefiting from the freedoms that we have because of what Barney Rosset did ... and the battles he fought. --John Waters, quoted from the documentary Obscene Barney Rosset to me represents the literary world of the latter half of the 20th century... No amount of words will be adequate to express my gratitude to Barney Rosset. --Kenzaburo Oe Barney Rosset was not an anonymous publisher for me. When I speak about my publisher in New York I never say 'Grove Press,' I always say 'Barney Rosset.' --Jean Genet Barney Rosset, whose guts and wisdom made it possible for me to read Beckett and all the other writers published by Grove, the one-in-a-million Barney Rosset, America's bravest publisher. --Paul Auster We're still benefiting from the freedoms that we have because of what Barney Rosset did ... and the battles he fought. --John Waters, quoted from the documentary Obscene Barney Rosset to me represents the literary world of the latter half of the 20th century... No amount of words will be adequate to express my gratitude to Barney Rosset. --Kenzaburo Oe Barney Rosset was not an anonymous publisher for me. When I speak about my publisher in New York I never say 'Grove Press,' I always say 'Barney Rosset.' --Jean Genet Barney Rosset, whose guts and wisdom made it possible for me to read Beckett and all the other writers published by Grove, the one-in-a-million Barney Rosset, America's bravest publisher. --Paul Auster [A] splendid and marvelously animated biography ... Mr. Rosenthal has written a wonderful book. --Wall Street Journal (on Nicholas Miraculous) Diverting and meticulous ... He writes with an historian's sense of context. --Christopher Hitchens, Washington Post (on The Character Factory) Author InformationMichael Rosenthal was the Roberta and William Campbell Professor in the Humanities at Columbia University. A Guggenheim Fellowship winner, he was also awarded Columbia College's Alexander Hamilton Medal, its highest honor. The author of Virginia Woolf, The Character Factory: Baden-Powell's Boy Scouts and the Imperatives of Empire, and Nicholas Miraculous, The Amazing Career of the Redoubtable Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, he resides in New York City. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |