Exposés and Excess Exposés and Excess
Personal Takes

Exposés and Excess

Muckraking in America, 19 / 2

    • $29.99
    • $29.99

Publisher Description

From robber barons to titanic CEOs, from the labor unrest of the 1880s to the mass layoffs of the 1990s, two American Gilded Ages—one in the early 1900s, another in the final years of the twentieth century—mirror each other in their laissez-faire excess and rampant social crises. Both eras have ignited the civic passions of investigative writers who have drafted diagnostic blueprints for urgently needed change. The compelling narratives of the muckrakers—Upton Sinclair, Ida Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens, and Ray Stannard Baker among them—became bestsellers and prizewinners a hundred years ago; today, Cecelia Tichi notes, they have found their worthy successors in writers such as Barbara Ehrenreich, Eric Schlosser, and Naomi Klein.

In Exposés and Excess Tichi explores the two Gilded Ages through the lens of their muckrakers. Drawing from her considerable and wide-ranging work in American studies, Tichi details how the writers of the first muckraking generation used fact-based narratives in magazines such as McClure's to rouse the U.S. public to civic action in an era of unbridled industrial capitalism and fear of the immigrant "dangerous classes." Offering a damning cultural analysis of the new Gilded Age, Tichi depicts a booming, insecure, fortress America of bulked-up baby strollers, McMansion housing, and an obsession with money-as-lifeline in an era of deregulation, yawning income gaps, and idolatry of the market and its rock-star CEOs.

No one has captured this period of corrosive boom more acutely than the group of nonfiction writers who burst on the scene in the late 1990s with their exposés of the fast-food industry, the world of low-wage work, inadequate health care, corporate branding, and the multibillion-dollar prison industry. And nowhere have these authors—Ehrenreich, Schlosser, Klein, Laurie Garrett, and Joseph Hallinan—revealed more about their emergence as writers and the connections between journalism and literary narrative than in the rich and insightful interviews that round out the book.

With passion and wit, Exposés and Excess brings a literary genre up to date at a moment when America has gone back to the future.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2013
March 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
248
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
SELLER
Perseus Books, LLC
SIZE
2.8
MB

More Books Like This

Radical Legacies Radical Legacies
2015
Around Quitting Time Around Quitting Time
2001
Class and the Making of American Literature Class and the Making of American Literature
2014
Panic! Panic!
2006
Writing the Past in Twenty-first-century American Fiction Writing the Past in Twenty-first-century American Fiction
2022
Urban Confrontations in Literature and Social Science, 1848-2001 Urban Confrontations in Literature and Social Science, 1848-2001
2016

More Books by Cecelia Tichi

What Would Mrs. Astor Do? What Would Mrs. Astor Do?
2018
Looking Backward Looking Backward
1982
A Gilded Death A Gilded Death
2021
A Fatal Gilded High Note A Fatal Gilded High Note
2022
Murder, Murder, Murder in Gilded Central Park Murder, Murder, Murder in Gilded Central Park
2022
A Gilded Drowning Pool A Gilded Drowning Pool
2023

Other Books in This Series