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  • 标题:Letter to the Editor.
  • 作者:West, James L. W., III
  • 期刊名称:The Mississippi Quarterly
  • 印刷版ISSN:0026-637X
  • 出版年度:2016
  • 期号:June
  • 出版社:Mississippi State University

Letter to the Editor.


West, James L. W., III


Letter to the Editor.

To the Editor:

I want to correct an error in my article "Yourcenar, et al.: Styron's Sources for <i>The Confessions of Nat Turner</i>" which appeared in the Winter 2016 issue of <i>Mississippi Quarterly</i>. On p. 43 of that article I state that Styron took the central dilemma of his novel <i>Sophie's Choice</i> (1979) from an incident mentioned by Hannah Arendt in her book <i>Eichmann in Jerusalem</i> (1963). Styron gave <i>Eichmann in Jerusalem</i> as his source in an essay called "A Wheel of Evil Come Full Circle," first published in the Summer 1997 issue of the <i>Sewanee Review</i> and reprinted in <i>My Generation</i> (2015), a volume of his collected nonfiction.

Styron misremembered his source. He had the correct author but the wrong book. The incident was mentioned by Arendt not in <i>Eichmann in Jerusalem</i> but in <i>The Origins of Totalitarianism</i> (rev. ed. 1968), which Styron also read and which he calls "a great illumination" in "A Wheel of Evil" <i>(My Generation</i> 180). In <i>The Origins of Totalitarianism</i>, Arendt mentions a Greek woman who was forced at the train platform at Auschwitz to choose which of her three children would be sent immediately to the gas chambers (452). In a footnote Arendt cites "Albert Camus in <i>Twice a Year</i>, 1947." This reference is to an essay by Camus called "The Human Crisis," published in the Fall-Winter 1946-1947 double number of a New York periodical called <i>Twice a Year</i>. It is appropriate that the ultimate source was Camus, a writer who exercised a strong influence on Styron from his second novel, <i>Set This House on Fire</i> (1960), through to the end of his career.

My speculations about the influence of <i>Eichmann in Jerusalem</i> on <i>The Confessions of Nat Turnerare</i>, still, as speculations, worth making. But the source of the incident that Styron fictionalizes in <i>Sophie's Choice</i> was <i>The Origins of Totalitarianism</i>, not <i>Eichmann in Jerusalem</i>. This correction will appear in print in an article by Ira Nadel entitled "Odd Fellows: Arendt and Roth," forthcoming in <i>Studies in English Language and Literature</i>. I am grateful to Professor Nadel for sharing information about Styron's source with me in advance of the publication of his article.

                                                 --James L. W. West III
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