The American Dream and the Popular NovelRoutledge, 23.10.2017 - 256 Seiten This title, originally published in 1985, examines conceptions of success and the good life expressed in bestselling novels – ranging from historical sagas and spy thrillers to more serious works by Updike, Bellows, Steinbeck and Mailer – published from 1945 to 1975. Using these popular books as cultural evidence, Elizabeth Long argues that the meaning of the American dream has changed dramatically, but in a more complex fashion than has been recognised by that country’s most prominent social critics. Her study presents a challenge to prevailing social-scientific views of contemporary American culture, and represents, both in theory and method, an important contribution to the study of culture and social criticism. |
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... Sennett have extended the discussion. Each of these thinkers lays claim to different territory. Riesman, for example, speaks of social character; Sennett, of the erosion of public life; Lasch, of the culture of narcissism. Their ...
... Sennett felt that the bureaucratic order of work and leisure had not only destroyed all organic forms of community, but was corrupting even the ideal of freedom by harnessing people's most primitive appetites to a voracious consumer ...
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Inhalt
from entrepreneurial adventure | |
the varieties of selffulfillment | |
the failure of success | |
The social critics | |
Conclusion | |
Notes | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |