The American Dream and the Popular NovelRoutledge & K. Paul, 1985 - 243 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 22
Seite 71
... business hierarchy . But the familiarity of this model , and of the kinds of men who are heroes in popular stories of religion , blurs the distinction between Christianity and the business ethos . Like the football players who take the ...
... business hierarchy . But the familiarity of this model , and of the kinds of men who are heroes in popular stories of religion , blurs the distinction between Christianity and the business ethos . Like the football players who take the ...
Seite 96
... business world operates and how he might begin to take part in it . Reflecting back on his New England family's past fortune , and his father's loss of the family wealth , the hero , Ethan Allen Hawley , characterizes success in every ...
... business world operates and how he might begin to take part in it . Reflecting back on his New England family's past fortune , and his father's loss of the family wealth , the hero , Ethan Allen Hawley , characterizes success in every ...
Seite 98
... business was uninter- esting rather than immoral . In Steinbeck's novel , business is evil , and this formulation creates a moral dilemma for Hawley that almost drives him to suicide . The moral and human costs of success are now ...
... business was uninter- esting rather than immoral . In Steinbeck's novel , business is evil , and this formulation creates a moral dilemma for Hawley that almost drives him to suicide . The moral and human costs of success are now ...
Inhalt
the social context | 17 |
from entrepreneurial | 63 |
the varieties | 91 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
achievement affluence American analysis appear assumptions attended audience authors become Bell bestselling novels born called central character City complex conventions corporate cultural describe developments discussion entrepreneurial especially ethos evidence examining example express fact feel felt fiction give hand hardcover heroes historical ideal important independent individual industry institutional interpretation kind Lasch less limited lists literary literature lives look mass meaning Mills moral novelists numbers organizations past percent perhaps period popular possibility present Press problems production progress publishing question readers reading reality reflect relationship relatively represents response rewards Riesman seems Sennett sense sexual shift similar social critics society stories structure success texts thought tion traditional turn understand University values Whyte women writing York young
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Prime-Time Families: Television Culture in Post-War America Ella Taylor Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1989 |