Self concept of personal identity in Philip Roth 's ghostwriter, personally unique identity, is constantly questioned and challenged by Philip Roth' s ghostwriter. We have received portraits of artists, writers and writers whose self concepts have some important connection with their art. Rather than bringing the issue of identity together, we do not incorporate the concept of self, aesthetic creativity, and artistic unity (recovery?) Together.
The novel "Ghostwriter" in the late 1950s was written by Philipp Ross and conveyed the story of Anne Frank. The hero Zachman tries to find a new muse and finds more meaning in his story. Zuckerman met a girl Amy with a strange career. She is the same age as Anne Frank, they are writers, she avoids talking about her past, and in the end she tries to escape to taste her childhood. From this Zuckerman, I think that Amy may be Anne Frank. Zuckerman restored her past and tried to create this Anne Frank. Furthermore, in the Holocaust memoir "Anne Frank's diary", the memoirs depict the relationship between Ann and her father, and anger and resentment from him will be gone after the war.
Philip Roth received many abuses against writing a complaint from Portnoy. He is Jewish. His family is Jewish. The main character of the story, as many people have imagined, what he grew up in a Jewish family, coping with the mother of the Jews, trying to find the right partner,
To Updike, a novelist Philip Roth often contacts. Ross explored the identity of the American society, especially the postwar era and the beginning of the 21st century. The work of Ross appeared frequently in Newark, New Jersey, and its work is considered highly autobiographical. . With these techniques and its distinct and rhythmic style, Ross explores American culture provocatively while exploring the difference between reality and fiction in literature. His most famous work is Zuckman's novel, a controversial Portnoy complaint (1969), goodbye, Columbus (1959), and so on. In his generation of the most decorative American writers, he received all major American literary awards, including his Pulitzer Prize of the major novel "American Pastoral" (1997).