Auerbach, Purdy;
Purdy, Auerbach

The 4-day annual meeting
of the American Comparative
 Literature Association
concludes today.
This year the the meeting
is held at Harvard University.
(Program– pdf, 256 pp.)

“But the spirit of rhetoric– a spirit which classified subjects in genera and invested every subject with a specific form of style as one garment becoming it in virtue of its nature [i.e. lower classes with the farcical low-style, upper classes with the tragic, the historic and the sublime elevated-style]– could not extend its dominion to them [the Bible writers] for the simple reason that their subject would not fit into any of the known genres.”

— Erich Auerbach, Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature (Princeton edition of 1953, p. 45, as quoted at Wikipedia)

The Washington Post on its literary columnist Michael Dirda:

“… he holds a PhD in comparative literature from Cornell….”

Dirda on author James Purdy (April 5, 2000):

QUESTION: “What do you make of Purdy and his place in 20th century American fiction?”
 
“A small sidetrack in American literature– a camp novelist, something of a cult figure. Will probably be forgotten in a generation. Malcolm is probably his best bet for survival, but a lot will depend on his readers and whether they can keep his name and fiction before the public. So far they haven’t been doing much of a job. Personally, I think Purdy is a funny, brilliant writer, but that doesn’t assure immortality.”

Steven H. Cullinane on Purdy,
“Radical Emptiness,”
 Friday, March 13th, 2009

“See you in the
  funny papers, Purdy.”