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Blood Meridian

Blood Meridian; or, The Evening Redness in the West is a 1985 epic historical novel by American author Cormac McCarthy, classified under the Western, or sometimes the anti-Western, genre.[1][2] McCarthy's fifth book, it was published by Random House.

Blood Meridian; or, The Evening Redness in the West
First edition cover
AuthorCormac McCarthy
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish and Spanish
GenreWestern, historical novel
PublisherRandom House
Publication date
April 1985
Media typePrint (hard and paperback)
Pages337 (first edition), 351 (25th anniversary edition)
ISBN0-394-54482-X (first edition, hardback)
OCLC234287599
813/.54 19
LC ClassPS3563.C337 B4 1985

Set in the American frontier with a loose historical context, the narrative follows a fictional teenager from Tennessee referred to as "the kid", with the bulk of the text devoted to his experiences with the Glanton gang, a historical group of scalp hunters who massacred American Indians and others in the United States–Mexico borderlands from 1849 to 1850 for bounty, sadistic pleasure, and eventually out of nihilistic habit. The role of antagonist is gradually filled by Judge Holden, a physically massive, highly educated, preternaturally skilled member of the gang who has Albinism and takes extreme sexual pleasure in killing everything he sees, including children and small dogs.

Although the novel initially received lukewarm critical and commercial reception, it has since become highly acclaimed and is widely recognized as McCarthy's magnum opus and one of the greatest American novels of all time.[3] Some have labelled it the Great American Novel.[4] After multiple unsuccessful attempts to adapt the novel into a film, New Regency is currently set to produce a feature film based on the novel.

Plot edit

The novel tells the story of a teenaged runaway referred to only as "the kid", who was born in Tennessee during the famously active Leonids meteor shower of 1833. He first meets the enormous, pale, hairless Judge Holden at a religious revival in a tent in Nacogdoches, Texas, at which Holden falsely accuses the preacher of raping children and goats, inciting the audience to attack him.

After a violent encounter with a bartender that establishes the kid as a formidable fighter, he joins a party of ill-equipped U.S. Army irregulars on a filibustering mission led by a Captain White. White's group is overwhelmed by a Comanche raiding party, and few of them survive. Arrested as a filibuster in Chihuahua, the kid is set free when his acquaintance Toadvine tells the authorities they will make useful Indian hunters. They join John Joel Glanton and his gang, among them Holden, and the bulk of the novel is devoted to detailing their activities and conversations. Though originally tasked with protecting locals from marauding Apaches, the gang devolves into the outright murder of unthreatening Indians, unprotected Mexican villages, and eventually even Mexican soldiers and anyone else who crosses their path, collecting the scalps of Indians to turn in for money whilst looting and massacring the Mexican forces.

According to the kid's new companion Ben Tobin, an "ex-priest", the Glanton gang first met Judge Holden while fleeing for their lives from a much larger Apache group. In the middle of a blasted desert, they found Holden sitting on an enormous boulder, where he seemingly was waiting for and expecting the gang. They agreed to follow his leadership, and he took them to an extinct volcano where he instructed them on how to manufacture gunpowder with the available resources, enough to give them the advantage against the Apaches. When the kid remembers seeing Holden in Nacogdoches, Tobin tells the kid that each man in the gang claims to have met the judge at some point before joining the Glanton gang.

After months of marauding and scalp hunting, the gang crosses into the Mexican Cession, where they eventually set up a systematic and brutal robbing operation at a ferry on the Colorado River at Yuma, Arizona. Local Yuma (Quechan) Indians are at first approached to help the gang wrest control of the ferry from its original owners, but Glanton's gang betrays and slaughters them and the passengers so they can plunder the ferry and frame the Indians for the attack. After a while, the Yumas vengefully attack and kill most of the gang in a second wave. The kid, Toadvine, and Tobin are among the survivors who flee into the desert, though the kid takes an arrow in the leg. The kid and Tobin head west, and come across Holden, who first negotiates, then threatens them for their gun and possessions. Holden shoots Tobin in the neck, and the wounded pair hide among bones by a desert creek. Tobin repeatedly urges the kid to fire upon Holden. The kid does so, but misses his mark.

The survivors continue their travels, ending up in San Diego, California. The kid is separated from Tobin and is subsequently imprisoned. Holden visits the kid in jail, and tells him that he has told the jailers "the truth": that the kid alone was responsible for the end of the Glanton gang. The kid is released on recognizance and seeks a doctor to treat his wound. While recovering from the effects of anesthesia, he hallucinates a visit from Holden along with a curious man who forges coins, and learns what Holden is judge of, and that "the night does not end". The kid recovers and seeks out Tobin, with no luck. He makes his way to Los Angeles, where Toadvine and another member of the Glanton gang, David Brown, were hanged for their crimes.

In 1878, the kid, now in his mid-40s and referred to as "the man", makes his way to Fort Griffin, Texas. At a saloon he meets Holden, who seems not to have aged in the intervening years. Holden calls the man "the last of the true", and the pair talk. Holden declares that the man has arrived at the saloon for "the dance" – the dance of violence, war, and bloodshed that the judge had so often praised. The man disputes Holden's ideas and, noting the performing bear at the saloon, states that "even a dumb animal can dance". When the man goes to an outhouse under another meteor shower shortly afterwards, he runs into the naked Holden, who holds him to his chest and shuts the door. Later, two men open the door to the outhouse and gaze in awe and horror at what they see. The last paragraph finds the judge back in the saloon, dancing and playing the fiddle, saying that he never sleeps and will never die.

In the epilogue, a man is augering lines of holes across the prairie, perhaps for fence posts. The man sparks a fire in each of the holes, and an assortment of wanderers trails behind him.

Characters edit

Major characters edit

  • The kid: The novel's anti-heroic protagonist or pseudo-protagonist,[5] the kid is an illiterate Tennessean whose mother died in childbirth. At 14, he flees from his father to Texas. He is said to have a disposition for violence and is involved in vicious actions throughout. He takes up inherently violent professions, specifically being recruited by violent criminals including Captain White, and later by Glanton and his gang, thereby securing release from a prison in Chihuahua, Mexico. The kid takes part in many of the Glanton gang's scalp-hunting rampages, but gradually displays a moral fiber that ultimately puts him at odds with the Judge. "The kid" is later as an adult referred to as "the man".
  • Judge Holden, or "the judge": A huge, pale and hairless man who often seems almost mythical or supernatural. He is a polyglot and polymath and a keen examiner and recorder of the natural world. He is extremely violent and deviant. He is said to have accompanied Glanton's gang since they found him sitting alone on a rock in the middle of the desert and he saved them from pursuing Apaches. It is hinted that he and Glanton have some manner of pact. He gradually becomes the antagonist to the kid after the dissolution of Glanton's gang, occasionally having brief reunions with the kid. Unlike the rest of the gang, Holden is socially refined and remarkably well educated; however, he perceives the world as ultimately violent, fatalistic, and liable to an endless cycle of bloody conquest, with human nature and autonomy defined by the will to violence; he asserts, ultimately, that "War is god." He is based partly on the historical character of Judge Holden.
  • John Joel Glanton, or simply Glanton: the American leader, or "captain", of a gang of scalphunters who murder Indians and Mexican civilians and military alike. His history and appearance are not clarified except that he is physically small with black hair and has a wife and child in Texas. He is a clever strategist. His last major action is to take control of a profitable Colorado River ferry, which ultimately leads to an ambush by Yuma Indians in which he is killed. He is based partly on the historical character of John Joel Glanton.
  • Louis Toadvine: A seasoned outlaw with whom the kid brawls and then burns down a hotel. Toadvine has no ears and his forehead is branded with the letters H and T (horse thief) and F. He reappears unexpectedly as a cellmate of the kid in the Chihuahua prison. From here he mendaciously negotiates the release of himself and the kid and one other inmate into Glanton's gang. Toadvine is not as depraved as some of the gang, questioning the killing of innocents, but is nonetheless a violent criminal. He is hanged in Los Angeles alongside David Brown.
  • Ben Tobin, "the priest", or "the ex-priest": A member of the gang and formerly a novice of the Society of Jesus. Tobin remains deeply religious. He feels an apparently friend-like bond with the kid and abhors the judge and his philosophy. He and the judge gradually become great spiritual enemies. He survives the Yuma massacre of Glanton's gang, but is shot in the neck by the judge. He is last seen after he arrives in San Diego with the kid and goes off on his own to look for a doctor.

Other recurring characters edit

  • Captain White, or "the captain": An ex-professional soldier and American supremacist who believes that Mexico is a lawless nation destined to be conquered by the United States. Captain White leads a patchwork company of militants into Mexico along with the recently recruited "Kid". After weeks of travel through the harsh Mexican desert, the company is ambushed by a Comanche war party. Captain White makes his escape with a few "officers" but is ultimately caught, beheaded, and subsequently has his head "pickled".
  • Bathcat: Born in Wales, Bathcat went to Van Diemen's Land to hunt Aborigines. Aside from a necklace of ears, his most notable trait is a number tattooed on the inside of his forearm, suggesting that he may have been sent to the colony as a convict. He is killed by Native Americans during their travels through Pimería Alta; a fate that was foretold during his introduction.
  • David Brown: A member of the gang who wears a necklace of human ears - likely taken from Bathcat's corpse. He is arrested in San Diego and Glanton seems especially concerned to see him released. He brings about his own release but does not return to the gang before the Yuma massacre. He is hanged with Toadvine in Los Angeles.
  • John Jackson: "John Jackson" is a name shared by two men in Glanton's gang – one black and one white – who detest one another and whose tensions frequently rise when in each other's presence. After trying to drive the black Jackson away from a campfire with a threat of violence, "White Jackson" is decapitated. "Black Jackson" assumes an integral role in the gang. While still referred to by numerous slurs, Jackson is nonetheless treated as part of a "body" that cannot have any part killed or violated, as Judge Holden goes to great lengths to rescue him after a confrontation on a mountain pass.

Themes edit

Violence edit

 
Scalping lithograph circa 1850s

A major theme is the warlike nature of man. Critic Harold Bloom[6] praised Blood Meridian as one of the best 20th century American novels, "worthy of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick,"[7] but admitted that his "first two attempts to read through Blood Meridian failed, because [he] flinched from the overwhelming carnage".[8]

Caryn James of The New York Times argued that the novel's violence was a "slap in the face" to modern readers cut off from brutality.[9] Terrence Morgan thought the effect of the violence initially shocking but then waned until the reader was desensitized.[10] Billy J. Stratton of Arizona Quarterly contends that the brutality is the primary mechanism through which McCarthy challenges the "oppositional structure" of the conventional narrative of the Old West; "[R]eaders encounter characters that are often depicted as more animal than human in their behaviors, participating in a ruthless struggle for fortune and power. It is the absence of a recognizable heroic character along with the negation of the Eurocentric oppositions that McCarthy's deployment of animal imagery is meant to illuminate."[11]

James D. Lilley argues that many critics struggle with the fact that McCarthy does not use violence for "jury-rigged, symbolic plot resolutions ... In McCarthy's work, violence tends to be just that; it is not a sign or symbol of something else."[12] In her aforementioned review, Caryn James noted that McCarthy depicts characters of all backgrounds as evil, in contrast to contemporary "revisionist theories that make white men the villains and Indians the victims."[9]

Epigraphs edit

 
One of the epigraphs entails an ancient scalped skull.

"You can find meanness in the least of creatures, but when God made man the Devil was at his elbow. A creature that can do anything"

The Old Hermit, pg. 19

Three epigraphs open the book: quotations from French writer Paul Valéry, from German Christian mystic Jakob Böhme, and a 1982 news clipping from the Yuma Sun reporting the claim of members of an Ethiopian archeological excavation that a fossilized skull three hundred millennia old seemed to have been scalped. Regarding the meaning of the epigraphs, David H. Evans writes that

[t]he taking of scalps, as McCarthy's third epigraph suggests, enjoys a profound antiquity, one coterminous with, perhaps, the beginnings of the species Homo sapiens.[13]

Ending edit

The narrative closes with ambiguity pertaining to the final state of the kid, or the man. Since the book portrays violence in explicit detail, this allusive portrayal has caused comment. Given Judge Holden's history and other details in the text, he presumably rapes the man before killing him.[14] Alternatively, perhaps the point is that readers can never know.[15]

Religion edit

 
Possible representation of Yaldabaoth, a malevolent Demiurge in Gnostic theology

Hell edit

David Vann argues that the setting of the American southwest which the Gang traverses is representative of hell. Vann claims that the Judge's kicking of a head is an allusion to Dante's similar action in the Inferno.[16]

Gnosticism edit

The second of the three epigraphs which introduce the novel, taken from the Christian theosophist Jakob Böhme, has incited varied discussion. The quote from Boehme is:

It is not to be thought that the life of darkness is sunk in misery and lost as if in sorrowing. There is no sorrowing. For sorrow is a thing that is swallowed up in death, and death and dying are the very life of the darkness.[17]

No specific conclusions have been reached about its interpretation nor relevance to the novel.[citation needed] Critics agree that there are Gnostic elements in Blood Meridian, but they disagree on the precise meaning and implication of those elements.

Leo Daugherty argues that "Gnostic thought is central to Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian", (Daugherty, 122) specifically the Persian-Zoroastrian-Manichean branch of Gnosticism. He describes the novel as a "rare coupling of Gnostic 'ideology' with the 'affect' of Hellenic tragedy by means of depicting how power works in the making and erasing of culture, and of what the human condition amounts to when a person opposes that power and thence gets introduced to fate."[18] Daugherty sees Holden as an archon and the kid as a "failed pneuma."[citation needed] He says that the kid feels a "spark of the alien divine."[19]

Daugherty further contends that the violence of the novel can best be understood through a Gnostic lens. "Evil" as defined by the Gnostics was a far larger, more pervasive presence in human life than the rather tame and "domesticated" Satan of Christianity. As Daugherty writes, "For [Gnostics], evil was simply everything that is, with the exception of bits of spirit imprisoned here. And what they saw is what we see in the world of Blood Meridian."[20]

However, Barcley Owens argues that while there are undoubtedly Gnostic qualities to the novel, Daugherty's arguments are "ultimately unsuccessful,"[21] because Daugherty fails to adequately address the pervasive violence and because he overstates the kid's goodness.[citation needed]

Theodicy edit

Douglas Canfield asserts that theodicy is the central theme of Blood Meridian. James Wood took a similar position, recognizing as a recurrent theme in the novel the issue of the general justification of metaphysical goodness in the presence of evil.[22] Chris Dacus expressed his preference for discussing the theme of theodicy in its eschatological terms in comparison to the theological scene of the last judgment.[citation needed] This preference for reading theodicy as an eschatological theme was further affirmed by Harold Bloom in his recurrent phrase of referring to the novel as "The Authentic Apocalyptic Novel."[23]

Writing edit

 
Cormac McCarthy in 1980, by which time he had already been working on Blood Meridian for about five years

McCarthy began writing Blood Meridian in the mid-1970s.[24] In a letter sent around 1979 he said that he had not touched Blood Meridian in six months out of frustration.[5] Nonetheless, significant parts of the final book were written in one go, "including the astonishing 'legion of horribles' passage".[5]

A legion of horribles, hundreds in number, half naked or clad in costumes attic or biblical or wardrobed out of a fevered dream with the skins of animals and silk finery [...].

Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian, IV.

McCarthy worked on the novel while living on the money from his 1981 MacArthur Fellows grant. It was his first attempt at a western and his first novel set in the Southwestern United States, a change from the Appalachian settings of his earlier work.[5]

 
Edward S. CurtisCanyon de Chelly (1904)

In 1974, McCarthy moved from his native Tennessee to El Paso, Texas, to immerse himself in the culture and geography of the American Southwest. He taught himself Spanish, which many of the characters of Blood Meridian speak.[5] McCarthy conducted considerable research to write the book. Critics have repeatedly demonstrated that even brief and seemingly inconsequential passages of Blood Meridian rely on historical evidence. The book has been described as "as close to history as novels generally get".[25]

The Glanton gang segments are based on Samuel Chamberlain's account of the group in his memoir My Confession: The Recollections of a Rogue. Chamberlain rode with John Joel Glanton and his company between 1849 and 1850. Judge Holden is described in Chamberlain's account but is otherwise unknown. Chamberlain writes:

The second in command, now left in charge of the camp, was a man of gigantic size who rejoiced in the name of Holden, called Judge Holden of Texas. Who or what he was no one knew, but a cooler-more blooded villain never went unhung. He stood six foot six in his moccasins, had a large, fleshy frame, a dull, tallow-colored face destitute of hair and all expression, always cool and collected. But when a quarrel took place and blood shed, his hog-like eyes would gleam with a sullen ferocity worthy of the countenance of a fiend ... Terrible stories were circulated in camp of horrid crimes committed by him when bearing another name in the Cherokee nation in Texas. And before we left Fronteras, a little girl of ten years was found in the chaparral foully violated and murdered. The mark of a huge hand on her little throat pointed out him as the ravisher as no other man had such a hand. But though all suspected, no one charged him with the crime. He was by far the best educated man in northern Mexico.[26]

McCarthy's judge was added to his manuscript in the late 1970s, a "grotesque patchwork of up-river Kurtz and Milton's Satan" and Chamberlain's account.[5]

McCarthy physically retraced the Glanton Gang's path through Mexico multiple times, and noted topography and fauna.[5] He studied such topics as homemade gunpowder to accurately depict the judge's creation from volcanic rock.

Style edit

McCarthy's writing style involves many unusual or archaic words, dialogue in Spanish, no quotation marks for dialogue, and no apostrophes to signal most contractions.[citation needed] McCarthy told Oprah Winfrey in an interview that he prefers "simple declarative sentences" and that he uses capital letters, periods, an occasional comma, a colon for setting off a list, but never semicolons.[27] He believes there is no reason to "blot the page up with weird little marks".[28] The New York Times described McCarthy's prose in Blood Meridian as "Faulknerian".[29] Describing events of extreme violence, McCarthy's prose is sparse yet expansive, with an often biblical quality and frequent religious references.[citation needed]

Reception and reevaluation edit

Blood Meridian initially received little recognition, but has since been recognized as a masterpiece and one of the greatest works of American literature. Some have called it the Great American Novel.[4] American literary critic Harold Bloom praised Blood Meridian as one of the 20th century's finest novels.[30] Aleksandar Hemon has called it "possibly the greatest American novel of the past 25 years".[31] David Foster Wallace named it one of the five most underappreciated American novels since 1960[32] and "[p]robably the most horrifying book of this [20th] century, at least [in] fiction."[33]

Time magazine included Blood Meridian in its "Time 100 Best English-language Novels from 1923 to 2005".[34] In 2006 The New York Times conducted a poll of writers and critics regarding the most important works in American fiction from the previous 25 years, and Blood Meridian was a runner-up.[35]

Literary significance edit

There has been no consensus in the interpretation of the novel. Americanist Dana Phillips said that the work "seems designed to elude interpretation".[36] One scholar has described Blood Meridian as:

Lyrical at times, at others simply archaic and recondite, at still others barely literate: the dissociative style of Blood Meridian defies accommodation to conventional assumptions. And that's the point.[25]

Nonetheless, academics and critics have suggested that Blood Meridian is nihilistic or strongly moral, a satire of the western genre or a savage indictment of Manifest Destiny. Harold Bloom called it "the ultimate western". J. Douglas Canfield described it as "a grotesque Bildungsroman in which we are denied access to the protagonist's consciousness almost entirely".[37] Richard Selzer declared that McCarthy "is a genius – also probably somewhat insane."[38] Critic Steven Shaviro wrote:

In the entire range of American literature, only Moby-Dick bears comparison to Blood Meridian. Both are epic in scope, cosmically resonant, obsessed with open space and with language, exploring vast uncharted distances with a fanatically patient minuteness. Both manifest a sublime visionary power that is matched only by still more ferocious irony. Both savagely explode the American dream of manifest destiny of racial domination and endless imperial expansion. But if anything, McCarthy writes with a yet more terrible clarity than does Melville.

— Steven Shaviro, "A Reading of Blood Meridian"[39]

Attempted film adaptations edit

 
An attempt to adapt the novel by Ridley Scott ultimately faltered.

Since the novel's release many have noted its cinematic potential. The New York Times' 1985 review noted that the novel depicted "scenes that might have come off a movie screen".[29] There have been attempts to create a motion picture adaptation of Blood Meridian, but all have failed during the development or pre-production stages. A common perception is that the story is "unfilmable" due to its unrelenting violence and dark tone.[40] In an interview with The Wall Street Journal in 2009 McCarthy denied this notion, with his perspective being that it would be "very difficult to do and would require someone with a bountiful imagination and a lot of balls. But the payoff could be extraordinary."[41]

Screenwriter Steve Tesich first adapted Blood Meridian into a screenplay in 1995. In the late 1990s, Tommy Lee Jones acquired the film adaptation rights to the story and subsequently rewrote Tesich's screenplay with the idea of directing and playing a role in it.[42] The production could not move forward due to film studios avoiding the project's overall violence.[43]

Following the end of production for Kingdom of Heaven in 2004, screenwriter William Monahan and director Ridley Scott entered discussions with producer Scott Rudin for adapting Blood Meridian with Paramount Pictures financing.[44] In a 2008 interview with Eclipse Magazine Scott confirmed that the screenplay had been written, but that the extensive violence was proving to be a challenge for film standards.[45] This later led to Scott and Monahan leaving the project, resulting in another abandoned adaptation.[46]

By early 2011, James Franco was considering adapting Blood Meridian, along with a number of other William Faulkner and Cormac McCarthy novels. After being persuaded by Andrew Dominik to adapt the novel, Franco shot 25 minutes of test footage starring Scott Glenn, Mark Pellegrino, Luke Perry, and Dave Franco. For undisclosed reasons, Rudin denied further production of the film.[43] On May 5, 2016, Variety revealed that Franco was negotiating with Rudin to write and direct an adaptation to be brought to the Marché du Film, starring Russell Crowe, Tye Sheridan, and Vincent D'Onofrio. However, it was reported later that day that the project dissolved due to issues with the film rights.[47]

In 2023, Deadline reported that New Regency is adapting Blood Meridian as a feature film. John Hillcoat, who previously directed an adaptation of McCarthy's novel The Road, is set to direct. Alongside his son John Francis, McCarthy was set to serve as executive producer of the film[48] before his death on June 13, 2023.[49] John Logan was later announced to be adapting the story.[50]

References edit

  1. ^ Kollin, Susan (2001). "Genre and the Geographies of Violence: Cormac McCarthy and the Contemporary Western". Contemporary Literature. 42 (3). University of Wisconsin Press: 557–88. doi:10.2307/1208996. JSTOR 1208996.
  2. ^ Hage, Erik. Cormac McCarthy: A Literary Companion. North Carolina: 2010. p. 45
  3. ^ "Harold Bloom on Blood Meridian". The A.V. Club. 15 June 2009.
  4. ^ a b Dalrymple, William. "Blood Meridian is the Great American Novel". Reader's Digest. McCarthy's descriptive powers make him the best prose stylist working today, and this book the Great American Novel.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Shannon, Noah Gallagher (6 October 2012). "Cormac McCarthy's Surprisingly Emotional First Drafts". Slate.
  6. ^ Bloom, Harold (2001). How to Read and Why. New York City: Simon and Schuster. p. 254. ISBN 978-0684859071.
  7. ^ Bloom, Harold (September 24, 2003). Dumbing down American readers. {{cite book}}: |newspaper= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Bloom, H. (2010), Introduction, in McCarthy, C. Blood Meridian, Modern Library, Random House, NY, 9780679641049, p. vii
  9. ^ a b James, Caryn (28 April 1985). "'Blood Meridian,' by Cormac McCarthy". The New York Times.
  10. ^ Owens 2000, p. 7.
  11. ^ Stratton, Billy J. (Autumn 2011). "'el brujo es un coyote': Taxonomies of Trauma in Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian". Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory. 67 (3). Tucson, Arizona: Johns Hopkins University Press on behalf of University of Arizona: 151–172. doi:10.1353/arq.2011.0020. S2CID 161619604.
  12. ^ Lilley 2014, p. 19.
  13. ^ Evans, David H. (Winter 2013). "True West and Lying Marks: 'The Englishman's Boy, Blood Meridian,' and the Paradox of the Revisionist Western". Texas Studies in Literature and Language. 55 (4). Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press: 406–433. doi:10.7560/TSLL55403. S2CID 161028723.
  14. ^ Shaw 1997, pp. 117–118.
  15. ^ Peter J. Kitson (ed.). "The Year's Work in English Studies Volume 78 (1997)", Kitson, p. 809.
  16. ^ Vann, David (November 13, 2009). "American inferno". The Guardian. London. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  17. ^ Mundik, Petra (May 15, 2016). A Bloody and Barbarous God: The Metaphysics of Cormac McCarthy. University of New Mexico Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-8263-5671-0. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  18. ^ Daugherty 1992, p. 129.
  19. ^ Daugherty, Leo. “Gravers False and True: Blood Meridian as Gnostic Tragedy.” Perspectives on Cormac McCarthy. Ed. Edwin T. Arnold and Dianne C. Luce. University Press of Mississippi: Jackson, 1993. 157-172.
  20. ^ Daugherty 1992, p. 124.
  21. ^ Owens 2000, p. 12.
  22. ^ Wood, James (July 25, 2005). "Red Planet: The sanguinary sublime of Cormac McCarthy". The New Yorker. New York. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  23. ^ "Interview with Harold Bloom". November 28, 2000. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  24. ^ Shannon, Noah (2012-10-05). "Cormac McCarthy Cuts to the Bone". Slate Book Review, 5 October 2012.
  25. ^ a b Mitchell, L. C. (2015) ‘A Book "Made Out of Books": The Humanizing Violence of Style in "Blood Meridian"’, Texas studies in literature and language, 57(3), pp. 259–281. doi: 10.7560/TSLL57301.
  26. ^ McNabb, Max (16 January 2019). "The Monster Who was Real: Judge Holden of Texas, Scalp-hunting Giant". Texas Hill Country.
  27. ^ Lincoln, Kenneth (2009). Cormac McCarthy. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-230-61967-8.
  28. ^ Crystal, David (2015). Making a Point: The Pernickity Story of English Punctuation. London: Profile Book. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-78125-350-2.
  29. ^ a b James, Caryn (April 28, 1985). "'Blood Meridian,' by Cormac McCarthy". The New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2021.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-03-24.
  31. ^ Books, Five (February 9, 2010). "Man's Inhumanity to Man". Five Books. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  32. ^ Wallace, David Foster. "Overlooked". Salon. Retrieved 2014-04-16.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-05-11. Retrieved 2014-04-16.
  34. ^ . Time. 2005-10-16. Archived from the original on October 19, 2005. Retrieved April 26, 2010.
  35. ^ The New York Times Magazine, May 21, 2006, p. 16.
  36. ^ Lilley 2014, p. 9.
  37. ^ Canfield 2001, p. 37.
  38. ^ Owens 2000, p. 9.
  39. ^ Shaviro 1992, pp. 111–112.
  40. ^ Mosley, Matthew (2023-04-04). "Hollywood Keeps Trying to Adapt Cormac McCarthy's "Unfilmable" Novel". Collider. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
  41. ^ John, Jurgensen (November 20, 2009). "Cormac McCarthy". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  42. ^ Balchack, Brian (May 9, 2014). "William Monahan to adapt Blood Meridian". MovieWeb. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  43. ^ a b Franco, James (July 6, 2014). "Adapting 'Blood Meridian'". Vice. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  44. ^ Stax (May 10, 2004). "Ridley Scott Onboard Blood Meridian?". IGN. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  45. ^ Essman, Scott (June 3, 2008). . Eclipse Magazine. Archived from the original on June 4, 2008. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  46. ^ Horn, John (August 17, 2008). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on June 15, 2009. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  47. ^ Kroll, Justin (May 5, 2016). "Russell Crowe in Talks to Star in James Franco-Directed 'Blood Meridian'". Variety. Retrieved May 22, 2016.
  48. ^ Kroll, Justin (April 28, 2023). "New Regency Adapting Cormac McCarthy's 'Blood Meridian' Into Feature Film With John Hillcoat Directing". Deadline. Retrieved April 28, 2023.
  49. ^ "Cormac McCarthy, author of The Road, dies aged 89". BBC News. June 13, 2023. Retrieved June 13, 2023.
  50. ^ Stephan, Katcy (April 24, 2024). "John Logan Tapped to Write Film Adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's 'Blood Meridian'". Variety. Retrieved April 24, 2024.

Bibliography edit

  • Canfield, J. Douglas (2001). Mavericks on the Border: Early Southwest in Historical fiction and Film. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2180-9.
  • Daugherty, Leo (1992). "Gravers False and True: Blood Meridian as Gnostic Tragedy". Southern Quarterly. 30 (4): 122–133.
  • Lilley, James D. (2014). "History and the Ugly Facts of Blood Meridian". Cormac McCarthy: New Directions. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-2767-3.
  • Owens, Barcley (2000). Cormac McCarthy's Western Novels. University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0-8165-1928-5.
  • Schneider, Christoph (2009). "Pastorale Hoffnungslosigkeit. Cormac McCarthy und das Böse". In Borissova, Natalia; Frank, Susi K.; Kraft, Andreas (eds.). Zwischen Apokalypse und Alltag. Kriegsnarrative des 20. und 21. Jahrhunderts. Bielefeld. pp. 171–200.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Shaviro, Steven (1992). "A Reading of Blood Meridian". Southern Quarterly. 30 (4).
  • Shaw, Patrick W. (1997). "The Kid's Fate, the Judge's Guilt: Ramifications of Closure in Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian". Southern Literary Journal: 102–119.
  • Stratton, Billy J. (2011). "'el brujo es un coyote': Taxonomies of Trauma in Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian". Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory. 67 (3): 151–172. doi:10.1353/arq.2011.0020. S2CID 161619604.

Further reading edit

  • Sepich, John (2008). . Southwestern Writers Collection Series. Foreword by Edwin T. Arnold (Revised and Expanded ed.). University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71821-0. Archived from the original on 2011-04-19. Retrieved 2011-04-02.

External links edit

  • James, C., Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy, The New York Times, Apr 1985
  • Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy, reviewed by Ted Gioia (The New Canon)
  • NPR interview with Ben Nichols about his record The Last Pale Light in the West, inspired by Blood Meridian

blood, meridian, other, uses, disambiguation, evening, redness, west, 1985, epic, historical, novel, american, author, cormac, mccarthy, classified, under, western, sometimes, anti, western, genre, mccarthy, fifth, book, published, random, house, evening, redn. For other uses see Blood Meridian disambiguation Blood Meridian or The Evening Redness in the West is a 1985 epic historical novel by American author Cormac McCarthy classified under the Western or sometimes the anti Western genre 1 2 McCarthy s fifth book it was published by Random House Blood Meridian or The Evening Redness in the WestFirst edition coverAuthorCormac McCarthyCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish and SpanishGenreWestern historical novelPublisherRandom HousePublication dateApril 1985Media typePrint hard and paperback Pages337 first edition 351 25th anniversary edition ISBN0 394 54482 X first edition hardback OCLC234287599Dewey Decimal813 54 19LC ClassPS3563 C337 B4 1985 Set in the American frontier with a loose historical context the narrative follows a fictional teenager from Tennessee referred to as the kid with the bulk of the text devoted to his experiences with the Glanton gang a historical group of scalp hunters who massacred American Indians and others in the United States Mexico borderlands from 1849 to 1850 for bounty sadistic pleasure and eventually out of nihilistic habit The role of antagonist is gradually filled by Judge Holden a physically massive highly educated preternaturally skilled member of the gang who has Albinism and takes extreme sexual pleasure in killing everything he sees including children and small dogs Although the novel initially received lukewarm critical and commercial reception it has since become highly acclaimed and is widely recognized as McCarthy s magnum opus and one of the greatest American novels of all time 3 Some have labelled it the Great American Novel 4 After multiple unsuccessful attempts to adapt the novel into a film New Regency is currently set to produce a feature film based on the novel Contents 1 Plot 2 Characters 2 1 Major characters 2 2 Other recurring characters 3 Themes 3 1 Violence 3 2 Epigraphs 3 3 Ending 3 4 Religion 3 4 1 Hell 3 4 2 Gnosticism 3 4 3 Theodicy 4 Writing 4 1 Style 5 Reception and reevaluation 6 Literary significance 7 Attempted film adaptations 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 8 2 Further reading 9 External linksPlot editThe novel tells the story of a teenaged runaway referred to only as the kid who was born in Tennessee during the famously active Leonids meteor shower of 1833 He first meets the enormous pale hairless Judge Holden at a religious revival in a tent in Nacogdoches Texas at which Holden falsely accuses the preacher of raping children and goats inciting the audience to attack him After a violent encounter with a bartender that establishes the kid as a formidable fighter he joins a party of ill equipped U S Army irregulars on a filibustering mission led by a Captain White White s group is overwhelmed by a Comanche raiding party and few of them survive Arrested as a filibuster in Chihuahua the kid is set free when his acquaintance Toadvine tells the authorities they will make useful Indian hunters They join John Joel Glanton and his gang among them Holden and the bulk of the novel is devoted to detailing their activities and conversations Though originally tasked with protecting locals from marauding Apaches the gang devolves into the outright murder of unthreatening Indians unprotected Mexican villages and eventually even Mexican soldiers and anyone else who crosses their path collecting the scalps of Indians to turn in for money whilst looting and massacring the Mexican forces According to the kid s new companion Ben Tobin an ex priest the Glanton gang first met Judge Holden while fleeing for their lives from a much larger Apache group In the middle of a blasted desert they found Holden sitting on an enormous boulder where he seemingly was waiting for and expecting the gang They agreed to follow his leadership and he took them to an extinct volcano where he instructed them on how to manufacture gunpowder with the available resources enough to give them the advantage against the Apaches When the kid remembers seeing Holden in Nacogdoches Tobin tells the kid that each man in the gang claims to have met the judge at some point before joining the Glanton gang After months of marauding and scalp hunting the gang crosses into the Mexican Cession where they eventually set up a systematic and brutal robbing operation at a ferry on the Colorado River at Yuma Arizona Local Yuma Quechan Indians are at first approached to help the gang wrest control of the ferry from its original owners but Glanton s gang betrays and slaughters them and the passengers so they can plunder the ferry and frame the Indians for the attack After a while the Yumas vengefully attack and kill most of the gang in a second wave The kid Toadvine and Tobin are among the survivors who flee into the desert though the kid takes an arrow in the leg The kid and Tobin head west and come across Holden who first negotiates then threatens them for their gun and possessions Holden shoots Tobin in the neck and the wounded pair hide among bones by a desert creek Tobin repeatedly urges the kid to fire upon Holden The kid does so but misses his mark The survivors continue their travels ending up in San Diego California The kid is separated from Tobin and is subsequently imprisoned Holden visits the kid in jail and tells him that he has told the jailers the truth that the kid alone was responsible for the end of the Glanton gang The kid is released on recognizance and seeks a doctor to treat his wound While recovering from the effects of anesthesia he hallucinates a visit from Holden along with a curious man who forges coins and learns what Holden is judge of and that the night does not end The kid recovers and seeks out Tobin with no luck He makes his way to Los Angeles where Toadvine and another member of the Glanton gang David Brown were hanged for their crimes In 1878 the kid now in his mid 40s and referred to as the man makes his way to Fort Griffin Texas At a saloon he meets Holden who seems not to have aged in the intervening years Holden calls the man the last of the true and the pair talk Holden declares that the man has arrived at the saloon for the dance the dance of violence war and bloodshed that the judge had so often praised The man disputes Holden s ideas and noting the performing bear at the saloon states that even a dumb animal can dance When the man goes to an outhouse under another meteor shower shortly afterwards he runs into the naked Holden who holds him to his chest and shuts the door Later two men open the door to the outhouse and gaze in awe and horror at what they see The last paragraph finds the judge back in the saloon dancing and playing the fiddle saying that he never sleeps and will never die In the epilogue a man is augering lines of holes across the prairie perhaps for fence posts The man sparks a fire in each of the holes and an assortment of wanderers trails behind him Characters editMajor characters edit The kid The novel s anti heroic protagonist or pseudo protagonist 5 the kid is an illiterate Tennessean whose mother died in childbirth At 14 he flees from his father to Texas He is said to have a disposition for violence and is involved in vicious actions throughout He takes up inherently violent professions specifically being recruited by violent criminals including Captain White and later by Glanton and his gang thereby securing release from a prison in Chihuahua Mexico The kid takes part in many of the Glanton gang s scalp hunting rampages but gradually displays a moral fiber that ultimately puts him at odds with the Judge The kid is later as an adult referred to as the man Judge Holden or the judge A huge pale and hairless man who often seems almost mythical or supernatural He is a polyglot and polymath and a keen examiner and recorder of the natural world He is extremely violent and deviant He is said to have accompanied Glanton s gang since they found him sitting alone on a rock in the middle of the desert and he saved them from pursuing Apaches It is hinted that he and Glanton have some manner of pact He gradually becomes the antagonist to the kid after the dissolution of Glanton s gang occasionally having brief reunions with the kid Unlike the rest of the gang Holden is socially refined and remarkably well educated however he perceives the world as ultimately violent fatalistic and liable to an endless cycle of bloody conquest with human nature and autonomy defined by the will to violence he asserts ultimately that War is god He is based partly on the historical character of Judge Holden John Joel Glanton or simply Glanton the American leader or captain of a gang of scalphunters who murder Indians and Mexican civilians and military alike His history and appearance are not clarified except that he is physically small with black hair and has a wife and child in Texas He is a clever strategist His last major action is to take control of a profitable Colorado River ferry which ultimately leads to an ambush by Yuma Indians in which he is killed He is based partly on the historical character of John Joel Glanton Louis Toadvine A seasoned outlaw with whom the kid brawls and then burns down a hotel Toadvine has no ears and his forehead is branded with the letters H and T horse thief and F He reappears unexpectedly as a cellmate of the kid in the Chihuahua prison From here he mendaciously negotiates the release of himself and the kid and one other inmate into Glanton s gang Toadvine is not as depraved as some of the gang questioning the killing of innocents but is nonetheless a violent criminal He is hanged in Los Angeles alongside David Brown Ben Tobin the priest or the ex priest A member of the gang and formerly a novice of the Society of Jesus Tobin remains deeply religious He feels an apparently friend like bond with the kid and abhors the judge and his philosophy He and the judge gradually become great spiritual enemies He survives the Yuma massacre of Glanton s gang but is shot in the neck by the judge He is last seen after he arrives in San Diego with the kid and goes off on his own to look for a doctor Other recurring characters edit Captain White or the captain An ex professional soldier and American supremacist who believes that Mexico is a lawless nation destined to be conquered by the United States Captain White leads a patchwork company of militants into Mexico along with the recently recruited Kid After weeks of travel through the harsh Mexican desert the company is ambushed by a Comanche war party Captain White makes his escape with a few officers but is ultimately caught beheaded and subsequently has his head pickled Bathcat Born in Wales Bathcat went to Van Diemen s Land to hunt Aborigines Aside from a necklace of ears his most notable trait is a number tattooed on the inside of his forearm suggesting that he may have been sent to the colony as a convict He is killed by Native Americans during their travels through Pimeria Alta a fate that was foretold during his introduction David Brown A member of the gang who wears a necklace of human ears likely taken from Bathcat s corpse He is arrested in San Diego and Glanton seems especially concerned to see him released He brings about his own release but does not return to the gang before the Yuma massacre He is hanged with Toadvine in Los Angeles John Jackson John Jackson is a name shared by two men in Glanton s gang one black and one white who detest one another and whose tensions frequently rise when in each other s presence After trying to drive the black Jackson away from a campfire with a threat of violence White Jackson is decapitated Black Jackson assumes an integral role in the gang While still referred to by numerous slurs Jackson is nonetheless treated as part of a body that cannot have any part killed or violated as Judge Holden goes to great lengths to rescue him after a confrontation on a mountain pass Themes editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Violence edit nbsp Scalping lithograph circa 1850s A major theme is the warlike nature of man Critic Harold Bloom 6 praised Blood Meridian as one of the best 20th century American novels worthy of Herman Melville s Moby Dick 7 but admitted that his first two attempts to read through Blood Meridian failed because he flinched from the overwhelming carnage 8 Caryn James of The New York Times argued that the novel s violence was a slap in the face to modern readers cut off from brutality 9 Terrence Morgan thought the effect of the violence initially shocking but then waned until the reader was desensitized 10 Billy J Stratton of Arizona Quarterly contends that the brutality is the primary mechanism through which McCarthy challenges the oppositional structure of the conventional narrative of the Old West R eaders encounter characters that are often depicted as more animal than human in their behaviors participating in a ruthless struggle for fortune and power It is the absence of a recognizable heroic character along with the negation of the Eurocentric oppositions that McCarthy s deployment of animal imagery is meant to illuminate 11 James D Lilley argues that many critics struggle with the fact that McCarthy does not use violence for jury rigged symbolic plot resolutions In McCarthy s work violence tends to be just that it is not a sign or symbol of something else 12 In her aforementioned review Caryn James noted that McCarthy depicts characters of all backgrounds as evil in contrast to contemporary revisionist theories that make white men the villains and Indians the victims 9 Epigraphs edit nbsp One of the epigraphs entails an ancient scalped skull You can find meanness in the least of creatures but when God made man the Devil was at his elbow A creature that can do anything The Old Hermit pg 19 Three epigraphs open the book quotations from French writer Paul Valery from German Christian mystic Jakob Bohme and a 1982 news clipping from the Yuma Sun reporting the claim of members of an Ethiopian archeological excavation that a fossilized skull three hundred millennia old seemed to have been scalped Regarding the meaning of the epigraphs David H Evans writes that t he taking of scalps as McCarthy s third epigraph suggests enjoys a profound antiquity one coterminous with perhaps the beginnings of the species Homo sapiens 13 Ending edit The narrative closes with ambiguity pertaining to the final state of the kid or the man Since the book portrays violence in explicit detail this allusive portrayal has caused comment Given Judge Holden s history and other details in the text he presumably rapes the man before killing him 14 Alternatively perhaps the point is that readers can never know 15 Religion edit nbsp Possible representation of Yaldabaoth a malevolent Demiurge in Gnostic theology Hell edit David Vann argues that the setting of the American southwest which the Gang traverses is representative of hell Vann claims that the Judge s kicking of a head is an allusion to Dante s similar action in the Inferno 16 Gnosticism edit The second of the three epigraphs which introduce the novel taken from the Christian theosophist Jakob Bohme has incited varied discussion The quote from Boehme is It is not to be thought that the life of darkness is sunk in misery and lost as if in sorrowing There is no sorrowing For sorrow is a thing that is swallowed up in death and death and dying are the very life of the darkness 17 No specific conclusions have been reached about its interpretation nor relevance to the novel citation needed Critics agree that there are Gnostic elements in Blood Meridian but they disagree on the precise meaning and implication of those elements Leo Daugherty argues that Gnostic thought is central to Cormac McCarthy s Blood Meridian Daugherty 122 specifically the Persian Zoroastrian Manichean branch of Gnosticism He describes the novel as a rare coupling of Gnostic ideology with the affect of Hellenic tragedy by means of depicting how power works in the making and erasing of culture and of what the human condition amounts to when a person opposes that power and thence gets introduced to fate 18 Daugherty sees Holden as an archon and the kid as a failed pneuma citation needed He says that the kid feels a spark of the alien divine 19 Daugherty further contends that the violence of the novel can best be understood through a Gnostic lens Evil as defined by the Gnostics was a far larger more pervasive presence in human life than the rather tame and domesticated Satan of Christianity As Daugherty writes For Gnostics evil was simply everything that is with the exception of bits of spirit imprisoned here And what they saw is what we see in the world of Blood Meridian 20 However Barcley Owens argues that while there are undoubtedly Gnostic qualities to the novel Daugherty s arguments are ultimately unsuccessful 21 because Daugherty fails to adequately address the pervasive violence and because he overstates the kid s goodness citation needed Theodicy edit Douglas Canfield asserts that theodicy is the central theme of Blood Meridian James Wood took a similar position recognizing as a recurrent theme in the novel the issue of the general justification of metaphysical goodness in the presence of evil 22 Chris Dacus expressed his preference for discussing the theme of theodicy in its eschatological terms in comparison to the theological scene of the last judgment citation needed This preference for reading theodicy as an eschatological theme was further affirmed by Harold Bloom in his recurrent phrase of referring to the novel as The Authentic Apocalyptic Novel 23 Writing edit nbsp Cormac McCarthy in 1980 by which time he had already been working on Blood Meridian for about five years McCarthy began writing Blood Meridian in the mid 1970s 24 In a letter sent around 1979 he said that he had not touched Blood Meridian in six months out of frustration 5 Nonetheless significant parts of the final book were written in one go including the astonishing legion of horribles passage 5 A legion of horribles hundreds in number half naked or clad in costumes attic or biblical or wardrobed out of a fevered dream with the skins of animals and silk finery Cormac McCarthy Blood Meridian IV McCarthy worked on the novel while living on the money from his 1981 MacArthur Fellows grant It was his first attempt at a western and his first novel set in the Southwestern United States a change from the Appalachian settings of his earlier work 5 nbsp Edward S Curtis Canyon de Chelly 1904 In 1974 McCarthy moved from his native Tennessee to El Paso Texas to immerse himself in the culture and geography of the American Southwest He taught himself Spanish which many of the characters of Blood Meridian speak 5 McCarthy conducted considerable research to write the book Critics have repeatedly demonstrated that even brief and seemingly inconsequential passages of Blood Meridian rely on historical evidence The book has been described as as close to history as novels generally get 25 The Glanton gang segments are based on Samuel Chamberlain s account of the group in his memoir My Confession The Recollections of a Rogue Chamberlain rode with John Joel Glanton and his company between 1849 and 1850 Judge Holden is described in Chamberlain s account but is otherwise unknown Chamberlain writes The second in command now left in charge of the camp was a man of gigantic size who rejoiced in the name of Holden called Judge Holden of Texas Who or what he was no one knew but a cooler more blooded villain never went unhung He stood six foot six in his moccasins had a large fleshy frame a dull tallow colored face destitute of hair and all expression always cool and collected But when a quarrel took place and blood shed his hog like eyes would gleam with a sullen ferocity worthy of the countenance of a fiend Terrible stories were circulated in camp of horrid crimes committed by him when bearing another name in the Cherokee nation in Texas And before we left Fronteras a little girl of ten years was found in the chaparral foully violated and murdered The mark of a huge hand on her little throat pointed out him as the ravisher as no other man had such a hand But though all suspected no one charged him with the crime He was by far the best educated man in northern Mexico 26 McCarthy s judge was added to his manuscript in the late 1970s a grotesque patchwork of up river Kurtz and Milton s Satan and Chamberlain s account 5 McCarthy physically retraced the Glanton Gang s path through Mexico multiple times and noted topography and fauna 5 He studied such topics as homemade gunpowder to accurately depict the judge s creation from volcanic rock Style edit McCarthy s writing style involves many unusual or archaic words dialogue in Spanish no quotation marks for dialogue and no apostrophes to signal most contractions citation needed McCarthy told Oprah Winfrey in an interview that he prefers simple declarative sentences and that he uses capital letters periods an occasional comma a colon for setting off a list but never semicolons 27 He believes there is no reason to blot the page up with weird little marks 28 The New York Times described McCarthy s prose in Blood Meridian as Faulknerian 29 Describing events of extreme violence McCarthy s prose is sparse yet expansive with an often biblical quality and frequent religious references citation needed Reception and reevaluation editBlood Meridian initially received little recognition but has since been recognized as a masterpiece and one of the greatest works of American literature Some have called it the Great American Novel 4 American literary critic Harold Bloom praised Blood Meridian as one of the 20th century s finest novels 30 Aleksandar Hemon has called it possibly the greatest American novel of the past 25 years 31 David Foster Wallace named it one of the five most underappreciated American novels since 1960 32 and p robably the most horrifying book of this 20th century at least in fiction 33 Time magazine included Blood Meridian in its Time 100 Best English language Novels from 1923 to 2005 34 In 2006 The New York Times conducted a poll of writers and critics regarding the most important works in American fiction from the previous 25 years and Blood Meridian was a runner up 35 Literary significance editThere has been no consensus in the interpretation of the novel Americanist Dana Phillips said that the work seems designed to elude interpretation 36 One scholar has described Blood Meridian as Lyrical at times at others simply archaic and recondite at still others barely literate the dissociative style of Blood Meridian defies accommodation to conventional assumptions And that s the point 25 Nonetheless academics and critics have suggested that Blood Meridian is nihilistic or strongly moral a satire of the western genre or a savage indictment of Manifest Destiny Harold Bloom called it the ultimate western J Douglas Canfield described it as a grotesque Bildungsroman in which we are denied access to the protagonist s consciousness almost entirely 37 Richard Selzer declared that McCarthy is a genius also probably somewhat insane 38 Critic Steven Shaviro wrote In the entire range of American literature only Moby Dick bears comparison to Blood Meridian Both are epic in scope cosmically resonant obsessed with open space and with language exploring vast uncharted distances with a fanatically patient minuteness Both manifest a sublime visionary power that is matched only by still more ferocious irony Both savagely explode the American dream of manifest destiny of racial domination and endless imperial expansion But if anything McCarthy writes with a yet more terrible clarity than does Melville Steven Shaviro A Reading of Blood Meridian 39 Attempted film adaptations edit nbsp An attempt to adapt the novel by Ridley Scott ultimately faltered Since the novel s release many have noted its cinematic potential The New York Times 1985 review noted that the novel depicted scenes that might have come off a movie screen 29 There have been attempts to create a motion picture adaptation of Blood Meridian but all have failed during the development or pre production stages A common perception is that the story is unfilmable due to its unrelenting violence and dark tone 40 In an interview with The Wall Street Journal in 2009 McCarthy denied this notion with his perspective being that it would be very difficult to do and would require someone with a bountiful imagination and a lot of balls But the payoff could be extraordinary 41 Screenwriter Steve Tesich first adapted Blood Meridian into a screenplay in 1995 In the late 1990s Tommy Lee Jones acquired the film adaptation rights to the story and subsequently rewrote Tesich s screenplay with the idea of directing and playing a role in it 42 The production could not move forward due to film studios avoiding the project s overall violence 43 Following the end of production for Kingdom of Heaven in 2004 screenwriter William Monahan and director Ridley Scott entered discussions with producer Scott Rudin for adapting Blood Meridian with Paramount Pictures financing 44 In a 2008 interview with Eclipse Magazine Scott confirmed that the screenplay had been written but that the extensive violence was proving to be a challenge for film standards 45 This later led to Scott and Monahan leaving the project resulting in another abandoned adaptation 46 By early 2011 James Franco was considering adapting Blood Meridian along with a number of other William Faulkner and Cormac McCarthy novels After being persuaded by Andrew Dominik to adapt the novel Franco shot 25 minutes of test footage starring Scott Glenn Mark Pellegrino Luke Perry and Dave Franco For undisclosed reasons Rudin denied further production of the film 43 On May 5 2016 Variety revealed that Franco was negotiating with Rudin to write and direct an adaptation to be brought to the Marche du Film starring Russell Crowe Tye Sheridan and Vincent D Onofrio However it was reported later that day that the project dissolved due to issues with the film rights 47 In 2023 Deadline reported that New Regency is adapting Blood Meridian as a feature film John Hillcoat who previously directed an adaptation of McCarthy s novel The Road is set to direct Alongside his son John Francis McCarthy was set to serve as executive producer of the film 48 before his death on June 13 2023 49 John Logan was later announced to be adapting the story 50 References edit Kollin Susan 2001 Genre and the Geographies of Violence Cormac McCarthy and the Contemporary Western Contemporary Literature 42 3 University of Wisconsin Press 557 88 doi 10 2307 1208996 JSTOR 1208996 Hage Erik Cormac McCarthy A Literary Companion North Carolina 2010 p 45 Harold Bloom on Blood Meridian The A V Club 15 June 2009 a b Dalrymple William Blood Meridian is the Great American Novel Reader s Digest McCarthy s descriptive powers make him the best prose stylist working today and this book the Great American Novel a b c d e f g Shannon Noah Gallagher 6 October 2012 Cormac McCarthy s Surprisingly Emotional First Drafts Slate Bloom Harold 2001 How to Read and Why New York City Simon and Schuster p 254 ISBN 978 0684859071 Bloom Harold September 24 2003 Dumbing down American readers a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a newspaper ignored help Bloom H 2010 Introduction in McCarthy C Blood Meridian Modern Library Random House NY 9780679641049 p vii a b James Caryn 28 April 1985 Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy The New York Times Owens 2000 p 7 Stratton Billy J Autumn 2011 el brujo es un coyote Taxonomies of Trauma in Cormac McCarthy s Blood Meridian Arizona Quarterly A Journal of American Literature Culture and Theory 67 3 Tucson Arizona Johns Hopkins University Press on behalf of University of Arizona 151 172 doi 10 1353 arq 2011 0020 S2CID 161619604 Lilley 2014 p 19 Evans David H Winter 2013 True West and Lying Marks The Englishman s Boy Blood Meridian and the Paradox of the Revisionist Western Texas Studies in Literature and Language 55 4 Austin Texas University of Texas Press 406 433 doi 10 7560 TSLL55403 S2CID 161028723 Shaw 1997 pp 117 118 Peter J Kitson ed The Year s Work in English Studies Volume 78 1997 Kitson p 809 Vann David November 13 2009 American inferno The Guardian London Retrieved June 1 2020 Mundik Petra May 15 2016 A Bloody and Barbarous God The Metaphysics of Cormac McCarthy University of New Mexico Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 8263 5671 0 Retrieved August 25 2018 Daugherty 1992 p 129 Daugherty Leo Gravers False and True Blood Meridian as Gnostic Tragedy Perspectives on Cormac McCarthy Ed Edwin T Arnold and Dianne C Luce University Press of Mississippi Jackson 1993 157 172 Daugherty 1992 p 124 Owens 2000 p 12 Wood James July 25 2005 Red Planet The sanguinary sublime of Cormac McCarthy The New Yorker New York Retrieved August 25 2018 Interview with Harold Bloom November 28 2000 Retrieved August 25 2018 Shannon Noah 2012 10 05 Cormac McCarthy Cuts to the Bone Slate Book Review 5 October 2012 a b Mitchell L C 2015 A Book Made Out of Books The Humanizing Violence of Style in Blood Meridian Texas studies in literature and language 57 3 pp 259 281 doi 10 7560 TSLL57301 McNabb Max 16 January 2019 The Monster Who was Real Judge Holden of Texas Scalp hunting Giant Texas Hill Country Lincoln Kenneth 2009 Cormac McCarthy Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan p 14 ISBN 978 0 230 61967 8 Crystal David 2015 Making a Point The Pernickity Story of English Punctuation London Profile Book p 92 ISBN 978 1 78125 350 2 a b James Caryn April 28 1985 Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy The New York Times Retrieved May 7 2021 Bloom on Blood Meridian Archived from the original on 2006 03 24 Books Five February 9 2010 Man s Inhumanity to Man Five Books Retrieved June 17 2023 Wallace David Foster Overlooked Salon Retrieved 2014 04 16 Gus Van Sant Interviews David Foster Wallace Archived from the original on 2014 05 11 Retrieved 2014 04 16 All Time 100 Novels Time 2005 10 16 Archived from the original on October 19 2005 Retrieved April 26 2010 The New York Times Magazine May 21 2006 p 16 Lilley 2014 p 9 Canfield 2001 p 37 Owens 2000 p 9 Shaviro 1992 pp 111 112 Mosley Matthew 2023 04 04 Hollywood Keeps Trying to Adapt Cormac McCarthy s Unfilmable Novel Collider Retrieved 2023 06 17 John Jurgensen November 20 2009 Cormac McCarthy The Wall Street Journal Retrieved May 21 2016 Balchack Brian May 9 2014 William Monahan to adapt Blood Meridian MovieWeb Retrieved May 21 2016 a b Franco James July 6 2014 Adapting Blood Meridian Vice Retrieved May 21 2016 Stax May 10 2004 Ridley Scott Onboard Blood Meridian IGN Retrieved May 21 2016 Essman Scott June 3 2008 Interview The great Ridley Scott Speaks with Eclipse by Scott Essman Eclipse Magazine Archived from the original on June 4 2008 Retrieved May 21 2016 Horn John August 17 2008 Cormac McCarthy s The Road comes to the screen Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on June 15 2009 Retrieved May 21 2016 Kroll Justin May 5 2016 Russell Crowe in Talks to Star in James Franco Directed Blood Meridian Variety Retrieved May 22 2016 Kroll Justin April 28 2023 New Regency Adapting Cormac McCarthy s Blood Meridian Into Feature Film With John Hillcoat Directing Deadline Retrieved April 28 2023 Cormac McCarthy author of The Road dies aged 89 BBC News June 13 2023 Retrieved June 13 2023 Stephan Katcy April 24 2024 John Logan Tapped to Write Film Adaptation of Cormac McCarthy s Blood Meridian Variety Retrieved April 24 2024 Bibliography edit Canfield J Douglas 2001 Mavericks on the Border Early Southwest in Historical fiction and Film University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2180 9 Daugherty Leo 1992 Gravers False and True Blood Meridian as Gnostic Tragedy Southern Quarterly 30 4 122 133 Lilley James D 2014 History and the Ugly Facts of Blood Meridian Cormac McCarthy New Directions Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 2767 3 Owens Barcley 2000 Cormac McCarthy s Western Novels University of Arizona Press ISBN 0 8165 1928 5 Schneider Christoph 2009 Pastorale Hoffnungslosigkeit Cormac McCarthy und das Bose In Borissova Natalia Frank Susi K Kraft Andreas eds Zwischen Apokalypse und Alltag Kriegsnarrative des 20 und 21 Jahrhunderts Bielefeld pp 171 200 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Shaviro Steven 1992 A Reading of Blood Meridian Southern Quarterly 30 4 Shaw Patrick W 1997 The Kid s Fate the Judge s Guilt Ramifications of Closure in Cormac McCarthy s Blood Meridian Southern Literary Journal 102 119 Stratton Billy J 2011 el brujo es un coyote Taxonomies of Trauma in Cormac McCarthy s Blood Meridian Arizona Quarterly A Journal of American Literature Culture and Theory 67 3 151 172 doi 10 1353 arq 2011 0020 S2CID 161619604 Further reading edit Sepich John 2008 Notes on Blood Meridian Southwestern Writers Collection Series Foreword by Edwin T Arnold Revised and Expanded ed University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71821 0 Archived from the original on 2011 04 19 Retrieved 2011 04 02 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Blood Meridian James C Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy The New York Times Apr 1985 Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy reviewed by Ted Gioia The New Canon NPR interview with Ben Nichols about his record The Last Pale Light in the West inspired by Blood Meridian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blood Meridian amp oldid 1220955039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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