Hauntings: Popular Film and American Culture 1990-1992
We are haunted by what we cannot fully identify, by what we cannot make identical to what we already are, have, and know. AIDS is visible, as is the South Central Los Angeles riot/revolt, the dead eyes of Amy Fisher, the pubic hair in Clarence Thomas' Coke, the Branch Davidian Compound shimmering in the distance, and much more. The intensity of all this does not escape the general public. Popular film plugs into this haunting power because it attracts a mass audience. This book is about what haunts the headlines as well as the Big Screen in America during 1990-1992.
1111928891
Hauntings: Popular Film and American Culture 1990-1992
We are haunted by what we cannot fully identify, by what we cannot make identical to what we already are, have, and know. AIDS is visible, as is the South Central Los Angeles riot/revolt, the dead eyes of Amy Fisher, the pubic hair in Clarence Thomas' Coke, the Branch Davidian Compound shimmering in the distance, and much more. The intensity of all this does not escape the general public. Popular film plugs into this haunting power because it attracts a mass audience. This book is about what haunts the headlines as well as the Big Screen in America during 1990-1992.
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Hauntings: Popular Film and American Culture 1990-1992

Hauntings: Popular Film and American Culture 1990-1992

by Joseph Natoli
Hauntings: Popular Film and American Culture 1990-1992

Hauntings: Popular Film and American Culture 1990-1992

by Joseph Natoli

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

We are haunted by what we cannot fully identify, by what we cannot make identical to what we already are, have, and know. AIDS is visible, as is the South Central Los Angeles riot/revolt, the dead eyes of Amy Fisher, the pubic hair in Clarence Thomas' Coke, the Branch Davidian Compound shimmering in the distance, and much more. The intensity of all this does not escape the general public. Popular film plugs into this haunting power because it attracts a mass audience. This book is about what haunts the headlines as well as the Big Screen in America during 1990-1992.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780791421543
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 11/22/1994
Series: SUNY series in Postmodern Culture
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 250
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Joseph Natoli teaches postmodernism at the Center for Integrative Studies/Arts and Humanities at Michigan State University. He is the editor of Tracing Literary Theory, Literary Theory's Future(s), Psychological Perspectives on Literature: Dissident Freudian and Non-Freudian, and co-editor of A Postmodern Reader (with Linda Hutcheon), published by SUNY Press; author of Mots D'Ordre: Disorder in Literary Worlds, also published by SUNY Press, and Twentieth Century Blake Criticism: Northrop Frye to the Present; and co-author of Psychocriticism.

Table of Contents

Prologue

Basic and Postmodern Instincts: The New Popular Realism in Film

Hunting the Haunted Heart

Moving Laterally across the Capes of Fear

Rebels and Rioters with Unsayable Causes

Home Alone Watching the Rodney King Tape, Or, Having Jeffrey Dahmer Over for Dinner

Rocking the Cradle of Family Values

Free Market or Free Play?

Intermezzo: Between Film and Culture

The Free Play of Popular Film

Geckoid Democracy and the Garfieldian American Dream

The Unforgiven: Histories and "Indians"

Robbin' N' the Hood N' the Nabe

Guns and Provolone: 'Wilding' and Wiseguys Doing the Wrong Thing

After Bob Roberts: Was This a Postmodern Presidential Campaign?

The Final Dance around the Planet: Green Space versus Self Space

Notes

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