Surface and Depth: The Quest for Legibility in American Culture
Autor Michael T. Gilmoreen Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 feb 2003
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780195157765
ISBN-10: 0195157761
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 234 x 160 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0195157761
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 234 x 160 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
The core of this book is an account of the literary dimensions of legibility, the intersection of the drive to make accessible and known with the literature of the American nation. Michael Gilmore argues his case with precision, bravura, and skill, offering a masterly intervention in the current debate over American literature--revealing, as he does so, an almost encyclopaedic knowledge of contemporary critical discourses, a sophisticated use of relevant cultural theories, and genuine ease with interdisciplinary strategies. Surface and Depth is provocatively poised against the current critical norm, which tends to emphasize plurality and difference. This is a work that, if anything, swims against the disciplinary tide in an effort to get ahead of current critical thinking--and, in my opinion, magnificently succeeds.
Surface and Depth takes up the fault lines in American understandings by stressing the obsession that the culture has always brought to its own visibility. Michael T. Gilmore begins with a question. Why did film and psychoanalysis, surface and penetration, receive their greatest reception in America and at the same time? His powerful answer ranges across the length and breadth of American understandings. We learn as never before exactly what Americans allow themselves to see and try to ignore. Then, in a series of brilliant readings, he proves that ferreting out the hidden is the controlling impulse in the country's literature. The result is a rare combination: cultural analysis at its best in what is also a very good read.
A sustained meditation on the pervasive American desire for 'legibility,' Michael T. Gilmore's Surface and Depth interweaves such themes as the rise of the cinema and the adoption of psychoanalysis in the United States with close readings of central political documents and major literary works. Written in the best American Studies tradition, this book offers a provocative interpretation of the intimate interconnectedness of democratic openness and racial closure in the civilization of the United States.
An acute, unexpected and convincing panoramic account of American culture's moral fascination with transparency and the denial of depth. Gilmore makes clear just what the opposite might be to Ellison's Invisible Man, and how standing up to sight and visibility define American life from the Puritans to the aftermath of Freud and Hollywood.
Surface and Depth takes up the fault lines in American understandings by stressing the obsession that the culture has always brought to its own visibility. Michael T. Gilmore begins with a question. Why did film and psychoanalysis, surface and penetration, receive their greatest reception in America and at the same time? His powerful answer ranges across the length and breadth of American understandings. We learn as never before exactly what Americans allow themselves to see and try to ignore. Then, in a series of brilliant readings, he proves that ferreting out the hidden is the controlling impulse in the country's literature. The result is a rare combination: cultural analysis at its best in what is also a very good read.
A sustained meditation on the pervasive American desire for 'legibility,' Michael T. Gilmore's Surface and Depth interweaves such themes as the rise of the cinema and the adoption of psychoanalysis in the United States with close readings of central political documents and major literary works. Written in the best American Studies tradition, this book offers a provocative interpretation of the intimate interconnectedness of democratic openness and racial closure in the civilization of the United States.
An acute, unexpected and convincing panoramic account of American culture's moral fascination with transparency and the denial of depth. Gilmore makes clear just what the opposite might be to Ellison's Invisible Man, and how standing up to sight and visibility define American life from the Puritans to the aftermath of Freud and Hollywood.
Notă biografică
Michael T. Gilmore is Paul Prosswimmer Professor of American Literature at Brandeis University.