The Trash Phenomenon: Contemporary Literature, Popular Culture, and the Making of the American Century

The Trash Phenomenon: Contemporary Literature, Popular Culture, and the Making of the American Century

by Stacey Olster
The Trash Phenomenon: Contemporary Literature, Popular Culture, and the Making of the American Century

The Trash Phenomenon: Contemporary Literature, Popular Culture, and the Making of the American Century

by Stacey Olster

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Overview

The Trash Phenomenon looks at how writers of the late twentieth century not only have integrated the events, artifacts, and theories of popular culture into their works but also have used those works as windows into popular culture's role in the process of nation building. Taking her cue from Donald Barthelme's 1967 portrayal of popular culture as "trash" and Don DeLillo's 1997 description of it as a subversive "people's history," Stacey Olster explores how literature recycles American popular culture so as to change the nationalistic imperative behind its inception.

The Trash Phenomenon begins with a look at the mass media's role in the United States' emergence as the twentieth century's dominant power. Olster discusses the works of three authors who collectively span the century bounded by the Spanish-American War (1898) and the Persian Gulf War (1991): Gore Vidal's American Chronicle series, John Updike's Rabbit tetralogy, and Larry Beinhart's American Hero. Olster then turns her attention to three non-American writers whose works explore the imperial sway of American popular culture on their nation's value systems: hierarchical class structure in Dennis Potter's England, Peronism in Manuel Puig's Argentina, and Nihonjinron consensus in Haruki Murakami's Japan.

Finally, Olster returns to American literature to look at the contemporary media spectacle and the representative figure as potential sources of national consolidation after November 1963. Olster first focuses on autobiographical, historical, and fictional accounts of three spectacles in which the formulae of popular culture are shown to bypass differences of class, gender, and race: the John F. Kennedy assassination, the Scarsdale Diet Doctor murder, and the O. J. Simpson trial. She concludes with some thoughts about the nature of American consolidation after 9/11.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780820325217
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Publication date: 06/16/2003
Pages: 294
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.81(d)

About the Author

STACEY OLSTER is a professor of English at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. She is the author of Reminiscence and Re-creation in Contemporary American Fiction.

STACEY OLSTER is a professor of English at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. She is the author of Reminiscence and Re-creation in Contemporary American Fiction.
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