Understanding Truman Capote Understanding Truman Capote
    • $11.99

Publisher Description

“Does an admirable job of examining Capote as a writer whose work reflects America of the late 1940s and 1950s more deeply than previously thought.” —Ralph F. Voss, author of Truman Capote and the Legacy of “In Cold Blood”
 
Truman Capote—and his most famous works, In Cold Blood and Breakfast at Tiffany’s—continue to have a powerful hold over the American popular imagination, along with his glamorous lifestyle, which included hobnobbing with the rich and famous and frequenting the most elite nightclubs in Manhattan. In Understanding Truman Capote, Thomas Fahy offers a way to reconsider the author’s place in literary criticism, the canon, and the classroom.
 
By reading Capote’s work in its historical context, Fahy reveals the politics shaping his writing and refutes any notion of Capote as disconnected from the political. Instead this study positions him as a writer deeply engaged with the social anxieties of the postwar years. It also applies a highly interdisciplinary framework to the author’s writing that includes discussions of McCarthyism, the Lavender Scare, automobile culture, juvenile delinquency, suburbia, Beat culture, the early civil rights movement, female sexuality as embodied by celebrities such as Marilyn Monroe, and atomic age anxieties. This new approach to studying Capote will be of interest in the fields of literature, history, film, suburban studies, sociology, gender/sexuality studies, African American literary studies, and American and cultural studies.
 
Capote’s writing captures the isolation, marginalization, and persecution of those who deviated from or failed to achieve white middle-class ideals and highlights the artificiality of mainstream idealizations about American culture. His work reveals the deleterious consequences of nostalgia, the insidious impact of suppression, the dangers of Cold War propaganda, and the importance of equal rights. Ultimately, Capote’s writing reflects a critical engagement with American culture that challenges us to rethink our understanding of the 1940s and 1950s.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2014
June 18
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
200
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of South Carolina Press
SELLER
OpenRoad Integrated Media, LLC
SIZE
2.9
MB

More Books Like This

J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye
2018
Rebels Rebels
2005
American Fiction of the 1990s American Fiction of the 1990s
2016
American Dream, American Nightmare American Dream, American Nightmare
2022
American Literature in Transition, 1980–1990 American Literature in Transition, 1980–1990
2017
Hard-Boiled Sentimentality Hard-Boiled Sentimentality
2008

More Books by Thomas Fahy

Sleepless Sleepless
2009
The Unspoken The Unspoken
2009
The Philosophy of Horror The Philosophy of Horror
2010
Night Visions Night Visions
2009
Understanding Tracy Letts Understanding Tracy Letts
2020
Captive Audience Captive Audience
2004

Other Books in This Series