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Chargement... Fight for Your Long Day (édition 2010)par Alex Kudera
Information sur l'oeuvreFight for Your Long Day - A Novel par Alex Kudera
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. This book tells the story of an adjunct professor in English who has to work five jobs to support himself. It covers one day in his life: his long day, when he has to work all five jobs. While Duffy has the noblest of goals at times, reality and his own human frailties make this day a particular difficult one. ( ) (Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this essay, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted illegally.) Author Alex Kudera has been a friend to CCLaP in the past (specifically, he kindly participated in one of our virtual book tours a couple of years ago), which made me predisposed to really want to like his newest book, Fight for Your Long Day; and so that makes it even more heartbreaking than usual to have to report that the novel is only so-so, a good concept that unfortunately sort of loses its way as Kudera gets farther and farther into the manuscript. Essentially a black comedy set among adjunct professors, in a contemporary world where such positions have basically become the new serfdom among academic society, Kudera is clearly aiming for Confederacy of Dunces territory with his collection of absurdist characters and the ridiculous situations they all find themselves in; but what Kudera seems to have missed is that Dunces works precisely because our "hero" Ignatius J. Reilly is supposed to be the most over-the-top and loathsome character of all, while Long Day's hero Cyrus Duffleman comes across much more ambiguously, sometimes even as just some normal nice guy who is unfairly being subjected to all these absurdist things going on around him, and a novel like this becomes a much more troubling thing when you attempt to elicit actual sincere sympathy for the inadvertently comedic tool at the center of it all. Plus, let's just admit that Dunces largely gets away with all its outrageous statements about race and sexual orientation precisely because it was written in the early 1960s, so has the advantage of time and historical context to make its edgy characterizations go down more smoothly; but when Kudera attempts the same thing in a contemporary context here, for example like the classically educated black woman who deliberately speaks in ghetto ebonics while in class to make a political point, such gimmicks often come across as mean-spirited and borderline-racist, obviously not Kudera's intention but just a side effect of attempting such dark humor in a politically correct age. While it certainly gets an A for ambition, I found the actual execution of Fight for Your Long Day to be middling at best, and it comes today with only a tepid recommendation. Out of 10: 7.5 I never came to like or even empathize with Cyrus Duffleman, adjunct professor in this novel. His life was just too miserable and sordid, without any redeeming quality. Duffy whines all day about how awful his life is, even when face to face with people whose lives are worse than his own. He is both hopeless and condescending to his students, and I failed to see the tiniest spark of life in his teaching. He doesn't teach because it's what he loves. What does he love? Maybe books, because he spends so much time thinking about his favorite dismal authors and searching for them on the shelves of libraries and bookstores. Rather than revealing the injustices of life as an adjunct instructor, this book does nothing to elevate the public perception of adjuncts. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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In American pop culture, the handsome college professor is easy to spot. He's endearingly neurotic, his unfinished novel usually stuffs an expensive mahogany desk, and female students sigh in his wake. And even if it's not explicitly explained to us, the handsome college professor always has one other thing: tenure. But the further one moves down the academic totem pole, professors start to look very different. On the very bottom, lies a less dashing, less financially secure, and altogether less noticed figure: The adjunct professor. In Fight for Your Long Day, we meet Cyrus Duffleman--"Duffy" for short--an adjunct professor who can barely afford his two-room apartment. Forget about an unfinished novel: He'd be thrilled with health insurance. Still, he gamely shuffles to four urban universities each day to teach, and works a security guard graveyard shift once a week. Cobbled together, he can almost make a living. But today, Duffy's routine isn't quite so predictable. The cryptic mumblings of a possibly psychotic student. A bow-and-arrow assassination. A small government protest, then, a very large and violent one. Lunch with a homeless woman who claims to have been a 1950s film star. Frenzied attempts to spare his sanity (and safety)--all while a female coed quietly eyes him. Part A Confederacy of Dunces (John Kennedy Toole), part Straight Man (Richard Russo), Fight for Your Long Day is a promising debut from a new literary talent. It will resonate with anyone who has ever known, been taught by, felt sorry for, or lived the life of an adjunct professor. --Publisher description. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813Literature English (North America) American fictionClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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