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The Street Was Mine - White Masculinity in Hardboiled Fiction and Film Noir (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2002)
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The Street Was Mine - White Masculinity in Hardboiled Fiction and Film Noir (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2002)
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This book considers a recurrent figure in American literature: the
solitary white man moving through urban space. The descendent of
Nineteenth-century frontier and western heroes, the figure
re-emerges in 1930-50s America as the 'tough guy'. The Street Was
Mine looks to the tough guy in the works of hardboiled novelists
Raymond Chandler ( The Big Sleep ) and James M. Cain ( Double
Indemnity ) and their popular film noir adaptations. Focusing on
the way he negotiates racial and gender 'otherness', this study
argues that the tough guy embodies the promise of an impervious
white masculinity amidst the turmoil of the Depression through the
beginnings of the Cold War, closing with an analysis of Chester
Himes, whose Harlem crime novels ( For Love of Imabelle ) unleash a
ferocious revisionary critique of the tough guy tradition.
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