All Categories > Books

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men

Star FullStar FullStar FullStar FullStar Empty

(Hardcover)-Just what kind of book is Let Us Now Praise Famous Men ? It contains many things: poems; confessional reveries; disquisitions on the proper way to listen to Beethoven; snippets of dialogue, both real and imagined; a lengthy response to a survey from the Partisan Review ; exhaustive catalogs of furniture, clothing, objects, and smells. And then there are Walker Evans's famously stark portraits of depression-era sharecroppers--photographs that both stand apart from and reinforce James Agee's words. Assigned to do a story for Fortune magazine about sharecroppers in the Deep South, Agee and Evans spent four weeks living with a poor white tenant family, winning the Burroughs's trust and immersing themselves in a sharecropper's daily existence. Given a first draft of the resulting article, the editors at Fortune quite understandably threw up their hands--as did several other editors who subsequently worked with a later book-length manuscript. The writing was contrary. It refused to accommodate itself to the reader, and at times it positively bristled with hostility. (What other book could take Marx as the epigraph and then announce: "These words are quoted here to mislead those who will be misled by them"?) Response to the book was puzzled or unfriendly, and Let Us Now Praise Famous Men sputtered out of print only a few short years after its publication. It took the 1960s, and a vogue for social justice, to bring Agee's masterwork the audience it deserved. Yet the book is far more interesting--aesthetically and morally--than the sort of guilty-liberal tract for which it is often mistaken. On an existential level, Agee's text is a deeply felt examination of what it means to suffer, to struggle to live in spite of suffering. On a personal level, it is the painful, beautifully written portrait of one man's obsession. In its collaboration with Evans's photographs, the book is also a groundbreaking experiment in form. In the end, however, it is more than merely the sum of its parts. Let Us Now Praise Famous Men
Read More
Email me when this price drops
SellerSeller RatingAdditional InfoList Price Tax & Shipping Total Price
Amazon

Star FullStar FullStar FullStar HalfStar Empty

In Stock

$150.05

Enter your Zip code to get the total price with tax and shipping:

You may also be interested in these products Store Price
let us now praise

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men: Three Tenant Families

Walker Evans, James Agee / 2001 Books Read More

FREE Standard Shipping

DeepDiscount.com

$16.20
Save 10%
three tenant families

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men : Three Tenant Families

The textbook, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men : Three Tenant Families, by James Agee and Walker Evans, available in ... Read More

Textbooks.com

$13.46
let us now praise

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men: Three Tenant Families

James Agee / 2005 / 818 pages Books Read More

FREE Standard Shipping

DeepDiscount.com

$26.25
Save 25%
their children after them

And Their Children After Them: The Legacy Of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men James

Dale Maharidge, Michael Williamson / 2004 / 362 pages Books Read More

FREE Standard Shipping

DeepDiscount.com

$16.15
Save 10%
let us gay

Let Us Be Gay

Let Us Be Gay Read More

FREE Standard Shipping

DeepDiscount.com

$17.97
can stop us now

Can't Stop Us Now: Linval Thompson Productions

Various Artists / CD Classical Read More

FREE Standard Shipping

DeepDiscount.com

$11.97
Save 25%
let us cd

Let Us C - With CD

The textbook, Let Us C - With CD, by Yashavant P. Kanetkar, available in Paperback. Published by: Jones & Bartlett ... Read More

Textbooks.com

$49.24
puma boots 14 us

Puma 750 Motorcycle Boots Size 14 Us Mens

Your browser does not support JavaScript. To view this page, enable JavaScript if it is disabled or upgrade your ... Read More

ebay

Star FullStar FullStar FullStar FullStar Empty

$99.99
talk many things

Let Us Talk of Many Things

The textbook, Let Us Talk of Many Things, by BUCKLEY JR., available in Paperback. Published by: Perseus Distribution ... Read More

Textbooks.com

$10.45
let us eat cake

Let Us Eat Cake

Let Us Eat Cake Books Read More

FREE Standard Shipping

DeepDiscount.com

$6.30

User Reviews for Let Us Now Praise Famous Men

Overall Rating: Star FullStar FullStar FullStar HalfStar Empty ( 6 reviews )
  1. Star FullStar FullStar FullStar FullStar Full ( 4 of 6 found this review helpful ) Posted: Mar 22 2007

    James Agee's painstaking and honest masterpiece is an exercise in empathy. It is a beautiful, tortured writing that speaks to both the deplorable conditions of the Depression-era souther sharecropper and the humanity of trying to present them in a favorable light. Agee's writing style is at times erratic-- which helps to give the book its character. It is often self-doubting, as Agee calls himself a spy and frequently second guesses his role in accurately reporting the families' lives. Beautifully done and a groundbreaking classic in ethnographic fieldwork-- a must read!

  2. Star FullStar FullStar FullStar EmptyStar Empty ( 1 of 1 found this review helpful ) Posted: Sep 16 2006

    Let us Now Praise Famous Men, in all its poetry and prose, reminds me of an epic, like the Hindu Mahabharata or Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. The lyrical narrative reveals just as much, if not more about Agee, than his subjects. His writing style excludes his subjects as readers. His prose, which tends to be lofty and cerebral, is also beautiful and brilliant. But, I often wondered, who he was writing for? The New Yorker audience? The distance in his observations often left me feeling cold. I imagine these hardworking sharecroppers exhibiting some joy, some evidence of warmth, of hope. But I had difficulty finding it in Agee's voice. The length of Agee's sentences and paragraphs were long, each containing an entire scene, and I labored through them, hoping sleep would not steal me from a passage I might not finish. It was as though Agee too, was afraid sleep would come and steal him from his mission, and so kept hacking away at each sentence, adding commas and colons and semi-colons, lingering his thoughts across the page. Whatever level of consciousness Agee existed, I could not hang with him for any more than a couple of sentences, as I would fall off the page and have to find my way back into the scene. Where was I? You get the picture... Agee also uses parenthesis and colons, often not giving his parenthesis a mate: (This struck me as rather unusual and often, cold and detached--more like a voyeur. Did he fabricate his own method of communication using punctuation or was this being done elsewhere at the time? I felt left out of his thoughts when he did this, like when two people are communicating via sign language and you can't make out a word they're saying. Was he doing this in a way to urge us to "think," to stretch beyond the ordinary conventions and try something on that is foreign and unfamiliar, like his subjects and their hardship?

  3. Star FullStar FullStar FullStar EmptyStar Empty ( 1 of 6 found this review helpful ) Posted: May 27 2006

    The eloquence of composition surely necessitated infinite use of superlatives and verbs, resulting in a requisite painstaking remostrance to the reader, thus fettering the effusion and disembogulation of the document. In other words, wouldn't it have been better to just leave all of the fluff out of the book and just write as if the reader is someone other than the Queen of England? If you can weed through all of excessive use poems and verbs, it's a halfway decent book

See all reviews...

See item at: Amazon: $150.05

Product Specs for Let Us Now Praise Famous Men

Author: James Agee
Number Of Pages: 528
Category: Hardcover
Brand: Houghton Mifflin
Dewey Decimal Number: 976.1
Label: Houghton Mifflin
Manufacturer: Houghton Mifflin
Product Group: Book
Publication Date: 2000-03-22
Creator: Walker Evans
See item at: Amazon: $150.05

Store reviews by Epinions Home

Shop for

search suggestions:

        Pocket Change

        Sign In | Create Account | My Pages

        Shopping Blog | About Become | Send Feedback | Share Your Success Story | Online Degrees | Exava

        Our International Sites: Japan | United Kingdom | Germany | Italy

        Copyright © 2009 Become, Inc.Terms of Use

        if yer hewmen, dawnt qlique dis linc