- The Naked and the Dead
-
For other uses, see The Naked and the Dead (disambiguation).
The Naked and the Dead is a 1948 novel by Norman Mailer. It was based on his experiences[1] with the 112th Cavalry Regiment during the Philippines Campaign (1944–45) in World War II.[2] It was later adapted into a film of the same name in 1958.
In 1998, the Modern Library ranked The Naked and the Dead 51st on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century.
Plot
Set on an island in the South Pacific where the American Army under General Cummings is trying to drive out the Japanese, The Naked and the Dead focuses on a single reconnaissance platoon. The novel is split between alternating chapters depicting ongoing action on the island and retrospective chapters focusing on a particular character's personality and past. The Naked and the Dead contains several combat scenes and a great deal of description of Army protocol, as well as detailed descriptions of the many trials and agonies of the enlisted man. The novel deals with the difficulties of the campaign, the danger posed by the Japanese, the conflict between officers and regulars, each man's own internal conflicts and fears, and the aggression between squad members. Everyone, from the General down, has character flaws, and there are few depictions of lasting happy family life or of good male-female relations. Later in the book a former general's aide, Hearn, becomes the Lieutenant of the squad, to the ire of Croft, the ambitious Sergeant previously in command, and to the detriment of the men of the platoon.[dubious ]
The novel questions the competence and motives of high-ranking officers, as well as the integrity of each of the many men depicted. The men suffer physical hardship and even casualties, but there is little mourning or kindness. There is no mercy shown to the Japanese. Occasionally, individual soldiers show sparks of sensitivity or thoughtfulness.
The Naked and the Dead was Mailer's first published novel and is still his top ranked novel by sales;[3] it established his reputation as a novelist and brought international recognition.
"Fug"
The publishers of The Naked and the Dead persuaded Mailer to use the euphemism "fug" in lieu of "fuck" in his novel. Mailer's version of a subsequent incident follows:
- "...The word has been a source of great embarrassment to me over the years because, you know, Tallulah Bankhead's press agent, many years ago, got a story in the papers which went...'Oh, hello, you're Norman Mailer,' said Tallulah Bankhead allegedly, 'You're the young man that doesn't know how to spell...' You know, the four-letter word was indicated with all sorts of asterisks... I thought she [Bankhead] should have hired a publicity man who had a better sense of fair play." (1968 Panel Discussion, CBLT-TV, Toronto, moderated by Robert Fulford) From "Conversations with Norman Mailer", 1988. Edited by J. Michael Lennon.
The band The Fugs took their name from this word.
The incident is mentioned in John Green's An Abundance of Katherines. Colin Singleton tells Lindsey Lee Wells about how he likes to read literary criticism after reading a book. He says that the publisher didn't want to publish it if it contained more "f-bombs" than regular bombs.
References
- ^ http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/mai0int-4
- ^ http://books.google.com.au/books?id=oVIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA109&lpg=PA109&dq=The+day+the+century+ended+gwaltney&source=bl&ots=VusZX_pc2a&sig=x1CNBe_QJbT3Fmfx-aAskxTvVlI&hl=en&ei=BrVbTIemBofevQOg_rmeAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10&ved=0CCMQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=The%20day%20the%20century%20ended%20gwaltney&f=false
- ^ B&N book search, 22 March 2009
Works by Norman Mailer Fiction The Naked and the Dead · Barbary Shore · The Deer Park (novel) · An American Dream · The Short Fiction of Norman Mailer · Why Are We in Vietnam? · A Transit to Narcissus · Of Women and Their Elegance · Ancient Evenings · Tough Guys Don't Dance · Harlot's Ghost · The Gospel According to the Son · The Castle in the Forest
Non-fiction The White Negro · Advertisements for Myself · The Presidential Papers · Cannibals and Christians · The Bullfight · The Armies of the Night · The Idol and the Octopus · Miami and the Siege of Chicago · Of a Fire on the Moon · King of the Hill · The Prisoner of Sex · Existential Errands · St. George and The Godfather · The Faith of Graffiti · Genius and Lust · Of a Small and Modest Malignancy, Wicked and Bristling with Dots · Pieces and Pontifications · The Spooky Art · Why Are We At War?
Biography Marilyn: A Biography · The Fight · The Executioner's Song · Oswald's Tale · Portrait of Picasso as a Young Man
Other The Deer Park (play) · Deaths for the Ladies (and Other Disasters) (poetry) · Maidstone (film) · The American (film) · WILD 90 (film) · Beyond the Law (film) · Some Honorable Men (anthology) · The Time of Our Time (anthology) · Modest Gifts (poems and drawings) · The Big Empty (dialogues) · On God (conversation)
Category:Works by Norman MailerCategories:- 1948 novels
- World War II novels
- Novels set in Oceania
- American novels
- Novels by Norman Mailer
- Debut novels
- World War II Pacific Theatre
- Novels set in the Philippines
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.