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America in Literature and Film - Modernist Perceptions, Postmodernist Representations (Paperback)
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America in Literature and Film - Modernist Perceptions, Postmodernist Representations (Paperback)
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Utilizing Lacan's psychoanalytic theory and Zizek's philosophical
adaption of it, this book brings into dialogue a series of
modernist and postmodernist literary works, films, and critical
theory that are concerned with defining America. Ahmed Elbeshlawy
demonstrates that how America is perceived in certain texts reveals
not only the idealization or condemnation of it, but an imago, or
constructed image of the perceiver as well. In turn, texts which
particularly focus on demonstrating how other texts about America
communicate an untrustworthy message themselves communicate an
unreliable message, inventing and reinventing a series of imagos of
America. These imagos refer to both idealized and deformed images
of America constructed by the perceivers of America. The first part
of this book is concerned with modernist perceptions of America,
and includes discussion of Adorno, Benjamin, Kafka, D. H. Lawrence,
as well as Emerson and Seymour Martin Lipset. The second part is
dedicated to postmodernist representations of America, focusing on
texts by Edward Said, Ihab Hassan, Susan Sontag, David Shambaugh
and Charles W. Brooks, and films including Lars von Trier's
Dogville and D.W. Griffith's Birth of a Nation.
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