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Containment Culture - American Narratives, Postmodernism, and the Atomic Age (Paperback, New)
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Containment Culture - American Narratives, Postmodernism, and the Atomic Age (Paperback, New)
Series: New Americanists
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Alan Nadel provides a unique analysis of the rise of American
postmodernism by viewing it as a breakdown in Cold War cultural
narratives of containment. These narratives, which embodied an
American postwar foreign policy charged with checking the spread of
Communism, also operated, Nadel argues, within a wide spectrum of
cultural life in the United States to contain atomic secrets,
sexual license, gender roles, nuclear energy, and artistic
expression. Because these narratives were deployed in films, books,
and magazines at a time when American culture was for the first
time able to dominate global entertainment and capitalize on global
production, containment became one of the most widely disseminated
and highly privileged national narratives in history.
Examining a broad sweep of American culture, from the work of
George Kennan to Playboy Magazine, from the movies of Doris Day and
Walt Disney to those of Cecil B. DeMille and Alfred Hitchcock, from
James Bond to Holden Caulfield, Nadel discloses the remarkable
pervasiveness of the containment narrative. Drawing subtly on
insights provided by contemporary theorists, including Baudrillard,
Foucault, Jameson, Sedgwick, Certeau, and Hayden White, he situates
the rhetoric of the Cold War within a gendered narrative powered by
the unspoken potency of the atom. He then traces the breakdown of
this discourse of containment through such events as the Bay of
Pigs invasion and the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley, and ties
its collapse to the onset of American postmodernism, typified by
works such as Catch-22 and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence.
An important work of cultural criticism, Containment Culture links
atomic power with postmodernism and postwar politics, and shows how
a multifarious national policy can become part of a nation's
cultural agenda and a source of meaning for its citizenry.
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