Dec 20, 2009

Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism | Saroyan, William - Gerald W. Haslam (essay date 1987)

Gerald W. Haslam (essay date 1987)

SOURCE: Haslam, Gerald W. “William Saroyan.” In A Literary History of the American West, pp. 472-81. Fort Worth: Texas Christian University Press, 1987.

[In the following essay, Haslam provides a brief overview of Saroyan's works, focusing particularly on his contribution to the advancement of ethnic literature in the United States.]

Few American writers tumbled as dramatically from critical acclaim as did William Saroyan. There were many reasons, not the least of which was his personality. Because, as Saroyan's son Aram has argued, the writer came to personify “what might be called the mythic potential of his particular social-historical moment,” Saroyan's self-centered, sometimes abrasive character became perhaps more important than his writing in the eyes of some. William Saroyan was, during the first half of his career, as much a public figure as an artist, and the confusion of those two...

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