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Was author Philip Roth a misogynist? His death reopens debate

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NEW YORK — The death of Philip Roth has reopened a decadesold debate about the extent to which the American literary master was a misogynist and whether his work should be reexamined in the #MeToo era.

Roth’s characteri­zation of women in his novels and at least one volatile relationsh­ip shot back to the spotlight on Wednesday, less than 24 hours after his death from congestive heart failure in a Manhattan hospital.

“Farewell Philip Roth,” tweeted one London reader, Ruth Robinson. “You were a gr8 writer and a massive misogynist. You were obsessed with sex but disliked, perhaps even despised women.”

Charlie Leddy- Owen, a sociology lecturer at Britain’s University of Portsmouth, took to Twitter to call 1995 novel Sabbath’s Theater by Roth “probably the most enjoyable but equally disgusting novel I’ve ever read.

“Not sure how many women will have enjoyed reading about his sexist, narcissist­ic leading characters — but what a writer he was.”

Accusation­s of misogyny began in the 1970s with the rise of feminism, fueled by a portrayal of domestic abuse in his 1974 novel My Life as a Man.

While critics debate the extent to which Roth’s work was autobiogra­phical, in his 1990 novel Deception Roth imagines his main character defending himself on charges of misogyny in court.

Following their messy breakup, British actress Claire Bloom painted a grim picture of life with Roth in the 1996 memoir Leaving a Doll’s House.

In a 2006 article, Chicago Tribune critic Julia Keller called Roth “a great writer with a large and terrible flaw: his women have no souls.”

His women “are mere mirrors to men. Echoes and shadows. Pale parallels,” she wrote.

Two years later, the feminist critic Vivian Gornick, compared Roth negatively to that other late 20th century literary great, Saul Bellow.

“If in Bellow misogyny was like seeping bile, in Roth it was lava pouring forth from a volcano,” she wrote in Harper Magazine.

Jacques Berlinerbl­au, a professor of Jewish civilizati­on at Georgetown University who has taught Roth texts for 25 years, says the novels include passages that students today consider “really disturbing.”

“The fiction is misogynist,” he told AFP. “I was always surprised the MeToo movement did not catch up to him, even if only to focus on the content of his fiction.”

Blake Bailey, friend and biographer, flatly denied that Roth was in favor of sexual harassment and sexual misbehavio­r, pointing to the presence of several of his ex-girlfriend­s at his death bed.

“He was one of the most decent men I have ever known,” Bailey told AFP.

Neverthele­ss, the writer was among those who worried that the #MeToo movement and sexual harassment watershed in the United States, could “get out of hand.”

“It was only the innocent he was worried about... not the people who deserved punishment,” he added. —

 ??  ?? US PRESIDENT Barack Obama presents the 2010 National Humanities Medal to novelist Philip Roth at the White House on March 2, 2011. Roth, a fierce and prolific talent who achieved fame with the sexually explicit Portnoy’s Complaint in 1969, died at 85...
US PRESIDENT Barack Obama presents the 2010 National Humanities Medal to novelist Philip Roth at the White House on March 2, 2011. Roth, a fierce and prolific talent who achieved fame with the sexually explicit Portnoy’s Complaint in 1969, died at 85...

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