The Crack-Up Explained

The Crack-Up
Author:F. Scott Fitzgerald
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Essays, letters and notes
Publisher:New Directions
Release Date:1945
Media Type:Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages:347 pp

The Crack-Up is a 1945 posthumous collection of essays by American author F. Scott Fitzgerald. It includes three essays Fitzgerald originally wrote for Esquire which were first published in 1936, including the title essay, along with previously unpublished letters and notes. After Fitzgerald's death in 1940, Edmund Wilson compiled and edited them into an anthology that was subsequently published by New Directions in 1945.

Essays

collected together under the title The Crack-Up in the book

The book also includes other essays by Fitzgerald and positive evaluations of his work by Glenway Wescott, John Dos Passos, and John Peale Bishop, plus letters from Gertrude Stein, T. S. Eliot, and Edith Wharton in 1925 praising Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby.

Legacy

Upon initial publication, the essays were poorly received and many reviewers were openly critical, particularly of Fitzgerald's personal revelations and his admission of his pessimistic outlook. Critics have since referred to the collection as "a compelling psychological portrait and an illustration of an important Fitzgerald[ian] theme".[1]

French philosopher Gilles Deleuze adopted and further conceptualized the term crack from "The Crack-Up" in The Logic of Sense.[2]

In popular culture

The title of the 2017 Fleet Foxes album Crack-Up was inspired by these essays.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Crack-Up . Bitonti . Tracy Simmons . Facts about Fitzgerald . 12 May 2005 . 15 June 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080512153554/http://www.sc.edu/fitzgerald/facts/facts5.html . 12 May 2008 .
  2. Book: Tynan. Aidan. 2012. Deleuze's Literary Clinic: Criticism and the Politics of Symptoms. Edinburgh University Press. 42. 9780748650576.
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADHeeDttv9s Fleet Foxes - Robin Pecknold Interview with Zach Cowie