Chandlerism
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Chandler + -ism, after writer Raymond Chandler.
Noun
[edit]Chandlerism (plural Chandlerisms)
- A passage of writing or dialogue that uses vivid and lyrical metaphors or similes, characteristic of the work of writer Raymond Chandler.
- 1982, The Review of the news, volume 18:
- As Rigby Reardon, Steve Martin easily mimics the patented Hollywood tough guy of the period, dangling a cigarette from one side of his mouth while distorting a Chandlerism from the other.
- 1999 Anthony Boucher, letter to Kenneth Millar, published in Tom Nolan (1999) Ross Macdonald: a biography, p114
- I'm especially struck with the way you turn the Chandlerism, the colorful unlikely metaphor or simile, into legitimate novelistic indication of character, rather than trick writing for its own sake.
- 2002, Film noir reader 3: interviews with filmmakers of the classic noir period, Limelight, page 110:
- The funny thing is, Chandler would come up with a good image, pictorial, and like I said I would come up with a Chandlerism, as it were.