At the Same Time explained

At the Same Time: Essays and Speeches
Author:Susan Sontag
Cover Artist:Dorothy Schmiderer Baker
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Essay, criticism
Publisher:Farrar, Straus and Giroux (US), Hamish Hamilton (UK)
Release Date:March 6, 2007
Media Type:Print (hardcover and paperback)
Pages:256
Isbn:978-0312426712

At the Same Time: Essays and Speeches is a nonfiction book by Susan Sontag published in 2007 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Sontag's first posthumously published book, it was edited by her friend Paolo Dilonardo and her assistant Anne Jump and features a foreword by her son David Rieff. At the Same Time includes pieces on literature, language and politics, as well as five speeches and lectures given by Sontag towards the end of her life.

Contents

Reception

At the Same Time received generally favorable reviews. Publishers Weekly wrote, "Sontag's brilliance as a literary critic, her keen analytical skill and her genius for the searingly apt phrase... are all fiercely displayed here."[2] Bloomberg News's Craig Seligman said that it "numbers among her finest books."[3] The Daily Telegraph wrote, "At the Same Time reads like a greatest-hits album - a little politics, something on photography, some lit crit - of the range of her commitments and passions."[4] Writing for The New York Review of Books, Eliot Weinberger gave the book a mixed review, praising some of Sontag's book introductions but criticizing the inclusion of five of her speeches and noting some apparent contradictions in her essays about the War on terror.[5]

Allegation of plagiarism

In a 2007 letter to the editor of The Times Literary Supplement, John Lavagnino identified an unattributed citation from Roland Barthes's 1970 essay "S/Z" in the last piece of the book, her speech "At the Same Time: The Novelist and Moral Reasoning".[6] Further research led Lavagnino to identify several passages that appeared to have been taken without attribution from an essay on hypertext fiction by Laura Miller, originally published in The New York Times Book Review six years earlier.[7] Writing for The Observer, Michael Calderone interviewed Sontag's publisher about the allegations, who said that "This was a speech, not a formal essay" and that "Susan herself never prepared it for publication."[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Moser . Benjamin . Benjamin Moser . Sontag: Her Life and Work . Sontag: Her Life and Work. 2019 . Ecco . New York . 978-0062896391 . 695.
  2. Web site: 1 January 2007 . At the Same Time: Essays and Speeches by Susan Sontag . 24 July 2024 . Publishers Weekly.
  3. Web site: Seligman . Craig . 7 March 2007 . Passionate to the end: Susan Sontag’s last writings . 24 July 2024 . The Seattle Times.
  4. Web site: Swift . Daniel . 26 April 2007 . Big words in capital letters . 24 July 2024 . . en.
  5. Web site: Weinberger . Eliot . 16 August 2007 . Notes on Susan . 24 July 2024 . . en.
  6. News: Lavagnino. John. April 20, 2004. Letters to the editor. Times Literary Supplement.
  7. News: Miller. Laura. March 15, 1998. www.claptrap.com. The New York Times Book Review.
  8. News: Calderone. Michael. May 9, 2007. Regarding the Writing of Others. The Observer. April 23, 2021.