1st Edition

Escape into a Labyrinth F. Scott Fitzgerald, Catholic Sensibility, and the American Way

By Benita A. Moore Copyright 1988
    366 Pages
    by Routledge

    366 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title, originally published in 1988, examines F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Catholic roots and his repudiation of those roots in pursuit of the American dream. The study aims to suggest that an investigation of Fitzgerald’s basic cultural and religious milieu might illuminate what he wrote, and may also illuminate the situation of Catholicism in America at the time. This title will be of interest to students of both literature and religious studies.

    1. On Writing for the School Masters of Ever Afterward;  Part One: The Enclosure;  2. The Education of a Personage;  Part Two: The Entrance of the Labyrinth;  3. Princeton: The Splendor and Sadness of the World  4. "I Didn’t Get Over"  5. There’s Little Comfort in the Wise;  Part Three: Labyrinths;  6. A World of Ineffable Toploftiness and Promise  7. Carnival by the Sea  8. The Service of a Vast, Vulgar, Meretricious Beauty  9. The Old Catholic in Him;  List of Works Cited

    Biography

    Benita A. Moore