Read Renegade: Henry Miller and the Making of "Tropic of Cancer" Online
Authors: Frederick Turner
Tags: #Genre.Biographies and Autobiographies, #Author; Editor; Journalist; Publisher
Miller, Henry (father): background of,
58
; customers of,
86
-87; HM’s observations of,
81
,
89
,
222
n13; HM working with,
83
,
84
-87,
89
; and Old World culture,
65
Miller, June Mansfield (wife): belief in HM’s talent,
6
,
104
-5,
106
, iii-12 ,
115
; drug use of, iii ,
115
; European trip of 1928,
109
,
110
; fantasies of,
143
,
163
; financing HM’s Paris; trip,
116
,
122
,
123
,
138
,
142
; “gold-digging” of,
106
,
107
,
108
-9, iii,
112
,
123
; HM meeting,
99
-100,
103
-4; HM’s correspondence from Paris,
123
; as HM’s metaphor for America,
101
; as HM’s muse,
100
-104,
175
,
215
; HM’s relationship with,
7
,
12
,
100
,
104
,
106
-7,
108
,
115
-16,
142
-44,
164
,
166
,
175
,
216
,
223
-24n23; and HM’s writing as he talks,
154
; jobs of,
105
, iii,
112
,
123
; and Kronski,
107
-8,
112
-13 ,
224
n23; Nin’s relationship with,
164
,
166
-67,
224
n23 ,
224
n24; Paris visits to HM,
142
-44,
163
-64,
166
,
175
,
177
,
224
n23 ,
224
n24; physical appearance of,
100
,
102
-3 ,
166
,
224
n24; running speakeasy,
12
,
106
; separations from; HM,
107
Miller, Lauretta (sister),
58
,
60
,
63
-64,
67
,
76
Miller, Lee,
174
Miller, Louise Nieting (mother): background of,
58
; demands of,
60
-61 ,
63
-64,
76
,
81
,
83
,
84
;
and HM’s spirit of rebellion,
61
,
88
,
130
; and Old World culture,
65
; shame of,
107
Mills, Benjamin Fay,
82
Miro, Joan,
132
-33
Modernism,
46
,
129
,
132
,
135
-36,
157
,
182
Modern world, rottenness of,
134
Mommsen, Theodor,
59
Mose, the Bowery B’hoy,
39
-40,
170
Murrel, John,
34
Nanavati, N. P.,
192
Natchez Trace,
34
New World: and discovery,
15
,
17
-18; and frontier,
29
; and lawlessness,
26
-27; and new man,
24
-25; obliteration of native cultures,
19
-20,
209
; Old World as HM’s new world,
117
,
213
; replica of Old World in,
19
,
25
Nietzsche, Friedrich,
87
Nin, Anais: diary of,
164
,
166
,
175
; HM’s correspondence with,
167
; and HM’s Lawrence essay,
176
,
177
; as HM’s muse,
175
,
215
; HM’s relationship with,
164
-71,
173
,
174
-75,
215
-16,
217
,
224
n23; and HM’s relationship with June,
164
,
166
,
223
-24n23; on HM without writing,
169
-70; impression of June Miller,
166
,
224
n24; literary talent of,
174
; June Miller’s relationship with,
164
,
166
-67,
224
n23,
224
n24; opinion of HM’s writing,
164
-65,
175
,
177
,
178
; writing of,
216
Noailles, Marie-Laure de,
125
,
132
Ojeda, Alonso de,
18
Old World: and burlesque,
71
; culture of,
7
,
8
-9,
65
,
72
; and discovery,
15
; and HM’s German ethnicity,
57
; as HM’s new world,
117
,
213
; and HM’s wilderness,
128
; and HM’s writing,
156
; and law,
26
; New World as replica of,
19
,
25
; Twain on,
47
-48
Osborn, Richard,
145
-47,
150
,
158
,
161
,
164
,
165
,
191
,
211
Outlaws: and American folklore,
15
,
28
,
29
,
34
-35,
36
,
38
-39; HM’s self-characterization as,
9
,
12
,
79
,
128
,
221
n12; Twain as,
55
Owen, Matt,
62
Pachoutinksy, Eugene,
192
Paris, France: avant-garde of,
130
,
131
-35,
149
,
223
n16; and European trip of 1928,
110
,
121
; and film,
129
-30,
131
,
136
; HM’s attraction to,
91
-92; HM’s choice of comrades in,
136
; HM’s correspondence with June,
123
; HM’s desperate circumstances in,
6
-8,
137
-41,
143
,
151
,
152
,
156
,
157
,
162
-63; HM’s exile in,
7
-9,
14
,
17
,
59
; HM’s interaction with streetwalkers,
137
-38,
140
,
146
,
190
-91; HM’s lack of artistic contacts,
135
-36,
137
; HM’s solitude in,
123
-24; June Miller and Kronski in,
107
-8,
112
-13,
224
n23; June Miller’s financing of,
116
,
122
,
123
,
138
,
142
; June Miller’s visits,
142
-44,
163
-64,
166
,
175
,
177
,
224
n23,
224
n24; recovery from World War I,
125
-26
Paul, Johnny,
63
Peche Merle cave,
222
n14
Penn, William,
220
n3
Perkins, Maxwell,
182
Perlés, Alfred: HM living with,
139
-40,
145
,
160
-61,
163
,
171
; and HM’s work at
Chicago Tribune,
161,
162
,
167
and remembering,
9
; in
Tropic of Cancer,
191
Polis, Joe,
44
Post-Naturalism,
183
Pound, Ezra,
225
n27
Powys, John Cowper,
82
Prejudices,
6
,
9
,
13
,
69
-70,
72
,
109
,
112
Progress,
14
,
81
,
82
,
91
,
201
-2 .
See also
Economic advancement
Purdy, James,
185
Putnam, Samuel,
191
Ramsay, Rob,
63
Rank, Otto,
178
Ray, Man,
136
Reardon, Lester,
63
Reed, John,
80
Rimbaud, Arthur,
128
Roche, Charlotte,
185
Root, Waverly,
127
-28,
187
,
222
n15
Rosset, Barney,
5
,
184
,
224
-25 n26
Rousseau, Henri,
133
-34
Rush, Benjamin,
23
Schnellock, Emil: education of,
70
-71; European travel experience of,
6
-7,
91
-92; HM’s correspondence with,
3
,
8
,
14
,
122
-23,
129
-30,
135
,
138
,
142
-43,
147
-48,
151
-56,
160
-61,
171
,
177
-78,
186
; as HM’s friend,
3
,
6
,
69
,
91
; and HM’s talk,
92
-93,
97
,
154
; and HM’s trip to Paris,
6
-7,
117
Schrank, Bertha,
191
Sedley, Bill,
36
-37
Selby, Hubert, Jr.,
184
Sexuality: and American literature,
41
; of burlesque,
42
,
71
-72; cultural shifts in treatment of,
184
; HM’s relationship with Chouteau,
75
,
168
; HM’s relationship with June Miller,
100
; HM’s relationship with Nin,
167
-69,
174
,
217
; HM’s relationship with Wickens,
87
-88; HM as sexual adventurer,
73
,
130
,
167
-68,
190
,
217
; and whorehouses,
4
-5,
74
-75,
79
,
80
,
190
-91
Shakespeare, William,
56
Shapiro, Karl,
221
n9
Slaughterhouse: America as,
14
,
17
; of capitalism,
96
,
97
,
128
Smith, Seba,
49
Sorgh, Hendrick Martensz,
133
Spengler, Oswald,
59
,
73
,
87
,
148
,
177
Steen, Jan Havicksz,
133
Stevens, Wallace,
209
Surrealism,
131
,
133
,
134
,
140
,
153
,
174
,
182
Talk: and American folklore,
28
,
31
,
46
,
52
-53,
78
-79,
155
,
220
n5; and HM’s inspiration,
94
,
222
n14; and HM’s sexuality,
168
; and HM’s tale spinning,
15
,
77
,
78
-80,
92
; and HM’s writing aspirations,
90
,
94
,
104
,
105
,
106
,
147
,
154
-55;
and monologists,
28
,
46
,
56
,
78
-79,
86
,
92
,
93
,
136
,
155
; and Schnel-lock’s friendship with HM,
92
-93,
97
,
154
; tall-talkers,
9
,
12
-13,
31
,
40
,
220
n5; and Twain,
46
,
50
,
52
-54,
55
,
56
,
222
n13; and unpredictability of HM’s talent,
93
-94
Tanner, John,
208
Tell, William,
33
Thorpe, Thomas Bangs,
32
Tresca, Carlo,
80
Tropic of Cancer
(Miller): American publication of,
5
,
184
,
217
,
221
n9; and anarchism,
172
; challenging nature of,
189
; and conditions of earthly existence,
201
-5,
208
,
210
,
212
,
225
n28; cover of,
179
-80; daring nature of,
184
-85,
197
; and essence of living,
186
-87; as event,
197
-98; and expatriate vignette,
195
-96; and Fraenkel’s death philosophy,
158
; HM finding voice in,
15
-16; HM looking back on writing of,
175
-76; and HM’s bravado,
3
-4; and HM’s literary reputation,
5
-6; HM’s reaction to publishing of,
178
-79,
215
; and HM’s relationship with Nin,
173
,
175
,
178
,
179
-80,
191
,
215
; and HM’s renegade status,
198
,
208
,
224
-25n26; HM’s revisions of,
176
,
178
,
179
,
197
; humor in,
15
,
191
-92,
198
-201; and June-Henry-Anais menage,
175
,
224
n23; legacy of,
216
; June Miller as muse,
100
,
175
; and missed opportunity of America,
17
,
213
; and narrator’s journey,
206
-9,
210
,
211
-13; outlawed status of,
198
,
210
,
224
-25 n26; and Parisian demimonde,
4
-5,
190
-91 ,
198
,
207
-8; Paris street scenes in,
194
-95,
207
; philosophical excursions in,
192
-94; portraits of HM’s companions in,
191
-92 ,
211
; Pound on,
225
n27; rawness of,
15
,
224
n25; singularity of voice,
223
n16; success of,
155
; and teaching in;
Dijon,
195
; tone of,
198
; vibrancy of,
188