![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() By 1966, the work these “New Journalists” were doing had not only been recognized as a movement and given a name, but had also, according to Tom Wolfe, their principal spokesman, begun to “wreak havoc in the literary world,” unleashing there a flood of “bitterness, envy, and resentment” over the journalistic usurpation of both literary techniques and literary insights. $10.95.ĭuring the early 1960's, working more or less independently, journalists like Gay Talese, Jimmy Breslin, and Tom Wolfe, and novelists-turned-journalists like Norman Mailer, Truman Capote, and James Baldwin, were beginning to employ certain novelistic techniques in the writing of nonfiction. With an Anthology edited by Tom Wolfe and E. ![]()
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