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In seven stunning original essays, Alice Bolin turns her gaze to the
myriad ways femininity is remixed and reconstructed by the pop culture
of the computer age. The unlikely, often insidious forces that drive
our popular obsessions are brilliantly cataloged, contextualized, and
questioned in a kaleidoscopic style imitating the internet itself.
In “The Enumerated Woman,” Bolin investigates how digital diet tracking
apps have increasingly transformed our relationships to our bodies.
Animal Crossing’s soothing retail therapy is analyzed in “Real Time”—a
surprisingly powerful portrait of late capitalism. And in the
showstopping “Foundering,” Bolin dissects our buy-in and complicity
with mythmaking around iconic founders, from the hubristic fall of
Silicon Valley titans, to Enron, Hamilton, and the USA.
For readers of Trick Mirror and How to Do Nothing, Culture Creep is a
swirl of nostalgia and visions of the future, questioning why, in the
face of seismic cultural, political, and technological shifts as
disruptive as the internet, we cling to the icons and ideals of the
past. Written with her signature blend of the personal and sharply
analytical, each of these keen-eyed essays ask us to reckon with our
own participation in all manner of popular cults of being, and cults of
believing.
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Dead Girls (Paperback)
Alice Bolin
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R383
R333
Discovery Miles 3 330
Save R50 (13%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Named a most anticipated book of 2018 by Bitch MagazineA collection
of essays that expertly blends the personal and political in an
exploration of American culture through the lens of our national
obsession with stories about dead women.In this poignant
collection, Alice Bolin examines iconic American works from the
essays of Joan Didion and James Baldwin to Twin Peaks, Britney
Spears, and Serial, illuminating the widespread obsession with
women who are abused, killed, and disenfranchised, and whose bodies
(dead and alive) are used as props to bolster men's stories. Smart
and accessible, thoughtful and heartfelt, Bolin investigates the
implications of our cultural fixations, and her own role as a
consumer and creator. Bolin chronicles her life in Los Angeles,
dissects the Noir, revisits her own coming of age, and analyzes
stories of witches and werewolves, both appreciating and
challenging the narratives we construct and absorb every day. Dead
Girls begins by exploring the trope of dead women in fiction, and
ends by interrogating the more complex dilemma of living women -
both the persistent injustices they suffer and the oppression that
white women help perpetrate. Reminiscent of the piercing insight of
Rebecca Solnit and the critical skill of Hilton Als, Bolin
constructs a sharp, perceptive, and revelatory dialogue on the
portrayal of women in media and their roles in our culture.
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