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4 - Ship of Fools: from novel to film

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2010

Robert H. Brinkmeyer Jr
Affiliation:
Professor of English and chair of the department, University of Arkansas
R. Barton Palmer
Affiliation:
Clemson University, South Carolina
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Summary

Both the author of Ship of Fools, Katherine Anne Porter (1890–1980), and the director and producer of the novel's film adaptation, Stanley Kramer, had grand expectations for their works. Porter envisioned her novel (the only one she published) as her crowning achievement, the work that would finally put to rest the carping critics who had dismissed her as “merely” a writer of short stories. Ship of Fools, moreover, would be the fullest expression of the major themes and issues that she had been exploring all along in her short stories, her culminating statement on life in the twentieth century, and, more generally, on the human condition. As the centerpiece of her career, the novel would look both backward to her previous work and forward to posterity.

Kramer, likewise, had high hopes for his film. As he recalled in his autobiography, he read Ship of Fools not long after its publication in 1962 and was immediately struck by its potential as a motion picture, observing that while reading the novel “ideas for filming kept flooding into my head. The characters, the subcharacters, the mature but tragic love story, all appealed to me. And the technique of telling the stories with a narrator who would function like a Greek chorus occurred to me in what I thought was a brilliant flash.”

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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References

Dolbier, Maurice, “I've Had a Good Run for My Money,” in Joan Givner, ed., Katherine Anne Porter: Conversations (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1987), pp. 74–77.Google Scholar
Givner, Joan, Katherine Anne Porter: A Life (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1982).Google Scholar
Kramer, Stanley, and Thomas, M. Coffey, A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World: A Life in Hollywood (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1997).Google Scholar
McDonald, Donald, “An Interview with Stanley Kramer,” in McDonald, ed., Stage and Screen: Interviews with Walter Kerr and Stanley Kramer (Santa Barbara: Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, 1962), pp. 29–46.Google Scholar
Newquist, Roy, “An Interview with Katherine Anne Porter,” in Givner, Joan, ed., Katherine Anne Porter: Conversations (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1987), 99–119.Google Scholar
Porter, Katherine Anne, Ship of Fools (Boston: Little, Brown, 1962).Google Scholar
Porter, Katherine Anne, “A Letter to the Editor of The Nation,” in Porter The Collected Essays and Occasional Prose of Katherine Anne Porter (Delacorte Press, 1970), pp. 203–204.Google Scholar
Porter, Katherine Anne, Letters of Katherine Anne Porter, ed. Bayley, Isabel (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press), 1990.Google Scholar
Ruoff, James, “Katherine Anne Porter Comes to Kansas” in Givner, Joan, ed., Katherine Anne Porter: Conversations (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1987), pp. 61–68.Google Scholar
Schorer, Mark, “Review of Ship of Fools, by Porter, Katherine Anne,” New York Times Book Review, April 1, 1962, pp. 1, 5.Google Scholar
Spoto, Donald, Stanley Kramer: Film Maker (1978), (Hollywood: Samuel French, 1990).Google Scholar
Stout, Janice, Katherine Anne Porter: A Sense of the Times (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1995).Google Scholar
Thompson, Barbara, “Katherine Anne Porter: An Interview,” in Joan Givner, ed., Katherine Anne Porter: Conversations (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1987), pp. 78–98.

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