From the American Revolution to the present, the United States
has enjoyed a rich and persuasive visual culture. These images have
constructed, sustained, and disseminated social values and
identities, but this unwieldy, sometimes untidy form of cultural
expression has received less systematic attention than other modes
of depicting American life. Recently, scholars in the humanities
have developed a new critical approach to reading images and the
cultural work they perform. This practice, American cultural
iconography, is generating sophisticated analyses of how images
organize our public life. The contributions to this volume exhibit
the extraordinary scope and interpretive power of this
interdisciplinary study while illuminating the dark corners of the
nation's psyche.
Drawing on such varied texts and visual media as daguerreotypes,
political cartoons, tourist posters, and religious artifacts, these
essays explore how pictures and words combine to teach us who we
are and who we are not. They examine mimesis in elegant portraits
of black Freemasons, industrial-age representations of national
parks, and postwar photographs of atomic destruction. They consider
how visual culture has described and disclosed the politics of
racialized sexuality, whether subconsciously affirming it in the
shadows of film noir or deliberately contesting it through the
interethnic incest of John Sayles's "Lone Star." Students of
literature, film, and history will find that these essays extend
the frontier of American studies.
The contributors are Maurice Wallace, Dennis Berthold, Alan
Trachtenberg, Shirley Samuels, Jenny Franchot, Cecelia Tichi, Eric
Lott, Bryan C. Taylor, and Jose E. Limon."
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