Turncoats, Traitors, and Fellow Travelers: Culture and Politics of the Early Cold War

Turncoats, Traitors, and Fellow Travelers: Culture and Politics of the Early Cold War

by Arthur Redding
Turncoats, Traitors, and Fellow Travelers: Culture and Politics of the Early Cold War

Turncoats, Traitors, and Fellow Travelers: Culture and Politics of the Early Cold War

by Arthur Redding

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Overview

The Cold War was unique in the way films, books, television shows, colleges and universities, and practices of everyday life were enlisted to create American political consensus. This coercion fostered a seemingly hegemonic, nationally unified perspective devoted to spreading a capitalist, socially conservative notion of freedom throughout the world to fight Communism.

In Turncoats, Traitors, and Fellow Travelers: Culture and Politics of the Early Cold War, Arthur Redding traces the historical contours of this manufactured consent by considering the ways in which authors, playwrights, and directors participated in, responded to, and resisted the construction of Cold War discourses. The book argues that a fugitive resistance to the status quo emerged as writers and activists variously fled into exile, went underground, or grudgingly accommodated themselves to the new spirit of the times.

To this end, Redding examines work by a wide swath of creators, including essayists (W. E. B. Du Bois and F. O. Matthiessen), novelists (Ralph Ellison, Patricia Highsmith, Jane Bowles, and Paul Bowles), playwrights (Arthur Miller), poets (Sylvia Plath), and filmmakers (Elia Kazan and John Ford). The book explores how writers and artists created works that went against mainstream notions of liberty and offered alternatives to the false dichotomy between capitalist freedom and totalitarian tyranny. These complex responses and the era they reflect had and continue to have profound effects on American and international cultural and intellectual life, as can be seen in the connections Redding makes between past and present.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781496801715
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Publication date: 10/08/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Arthur Redding is associate professor of English at York University and the author of Raids on Human Consciousness: Writing, Anarchism, and Violence.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments     IX
Cultural Fronts     3
Closet, Coup, and Cold War F.O. Matthiessen's From the Heart of Europe     37
What's Black and White and Red All Over? The Cold War and the Geopolitics of Race     57
What it Takes to Be a Man Masculinity, Deviance, and Sexuality     79
The Dreaded Voyage Into The World Nomadic Ethics     98
Frontier Mythographies Savagery and Civilization in John Ford     133
Notes     153
Works Cited     167
Index     177
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