"Artificial Mythologies " was first published in 1997. Minnesota
Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable
books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the
original University of Minnesota Press editions.
Cultural critics teach us that myths are artificial. Cultural
innovators use the artificial to make something new. In this
exhilarating guide, Craig J. Saper takes us on an eye-opening tour
of the process of cultural invention-willfully entertaining
foolish, absurd, even fake, solutions as a way of reaching new
perspectives on cultural problems. Saper deploys this method to
reveal unsuspected connections among major cultural issues, such as
urban decay, the dangers of television's power, family values, and
conservative criticism of higher education.
The model Saper uses builds on the later works of the revered
French cultural critic Roland Barthes. These works, Saper argues,
suggest poignant, playful, and productive ways of engaging dominant
methodologies and mythologies. Artificial Mythologies shows us how,
by allowing the artificial-our received ideas, common responses,
and cultural mythologies-full play, we can arrive at provocative
new solutions. The book demonstrates that the very conceptions of
media and sociocultural issues that stymie innovation can be made
to serve the cause of invention.
Craig J. Saper is assistant professor in the Department of
English at the University of Pennsylvania.
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