Book Description
Examines a wide variety of cultural and technological phenomena that have helped shape American popular culture over the last 150 years.
Author : Michael Thomas Carroll
Publisher : SUNY Press
Page : 260 pages
File Size : 22,47 MB
Release : 2000-09-28
Category : Technology & Engineering
ISBN : 9780791447147
Examines a wide variety of cultural and technological phenomena that have helped shape American popular culture over the last 150 years.
Author : Trent MacNamara
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 319 pages
File Size : 24,20 MB
Release : 2018-10-11
Category : History
ISBN : 1316519589
MacNamara reveals how ordinary women and men legitimized birth control through private moral action, as opposed to public advocacy, in the early twentieth century.
Author : Michael Thomas Carroll
Publisher : SUNY Press
Page : 260 pages
File Size : 26,91 MB
Release : 2000-09-28
Category : Technology & Engineering
ISBN : 9780791447130
Examines a wide variety of cultural and technological phenomena that have helped shape American popular culture over the last 150 years.
Author : James Edward Smethurst
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 266 pages
File Size : 41,89 MB
Release : 2011
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0807834637
The period between 1880 and 1918, at the end of which Jim Crow was firmly established and the Great Migration of African Americans was well under way, was not the nadir for black culture, James Smethurst reveals, but instead a time of profound response fr
Author : William Rowe
Publisher :
Page : 272 pages
File Size : 46,37 MB
Release : 1991
Category : History
ISBN :
Samba and carnival, radio soaps and telenovelas, oral poetry, popular drama, Amerindian art. This illustrated overview of Latin America's popular culture considers the broad spectrum of cultural forms in the various countries of the subcontinent. Exploring the ways in which daily life and ritual have resisted and been influenced by Western mass culture, Memory and Modernity traces the main anthropological, sociological and political debates about the nature of popular culture. Rowe and Schelling use their analysis of the development of a culture industry in Latin America to engage with wider debates about modernity, drawing out the contrast between Latin America's cultural wealth and its widespread material poverty. In challenging the assumptions of much Western cultural criticism, this book will be essential reading for students of Latin American society, while offering the general reader a concise and accessible overview of an exciting and varied popular culture.
Author : Kristen Whissel
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 288 pages
File Size : 14,38 MB
Release : 2008-10-03
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 0822391457
In Picturing American Modernity, Kristen Whissel investigates the relationship between early American cinema and the experience of technological modernity. She demonstrates how between the late 1890s and the eve of the First World War moving pictures helped the U.S. public understand the possibilities and perils of new forms of “traffic” produced by industrialization and urbanization. As more efficient ways to move people, goods, and information transformed work and leisure at home and contributed to the expansion of the U.S. empire abroad, silent films presented compelling visual representations of the spaces, bodies, machines, and forms of mobility that increasingly defined modern life in the United States and its new territories. Whissel shows that by portraying key events, achievements, and anxieties, the cinema invited American audiences to participate in the rapidly changing world around them. Moving pictures provided astonishing visual dispatches from military camps prior to the outbreak of fighting in the Spanish-American War. They allowed audiences to delight in images of the Pan-American Exposition, and also to mourn the assassination of President McKinley there. One early film genre, the reenactment, presented spectators with renditions of bloody battles fought overseas during the Philippine-American War. Early features offered sensational dramatizations of the scandalous “white slave trade,” which was often linked to immigration and new forms of urban work and leisure. By bringing these frequently distant events and anxieties “near” to audiences in cities and towns across the country, the cinema helped construct an American national identity for the machine age.
Author : Walter Kalaidjian
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 360 pages
File Size : 14,53 MB
Release : 2005-04-28
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780521829953
Original essays by twelve distinguished international scholars offer critical overviews of the major genres, literary culture, and social contexts that define the current state of scholarship. This Companion also features a chronology of key events and publication dates covering the first half of the twentieth century in the United States. The introductory reference guide concludes with a current bibliography of further reading organized by chapter topics.
Author : Kenneth J. Bindas
Publisher : Culture America (Hardcover)
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 19,18 MB
Release : 2017
Category : History
ISBN : 9780700624003
Modernity and the Great Depression explores how the worst economic, social, and political crisis in the last century created the space for a national conversation about the ideals of modernity--order, planning, and reason.
Author : José F. Aranda
Publisher : U of Nebraska Press
Page : 350 pages
File Size : 32,69 MB
Release : 2022-02
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1496229894
In The Places of Modernity in Early Mexican American Literature, 1848-1948, José F. Aranda Jr. describes the first one hundred years of Mexican American literature. He argues for the importance of interrogating the concept of modernity in light of what has emerged as a canon of earlier pre-1968 Mexican American literature. In order to understand modernity for diverse communities of Mexican Americans, he contends, one must see it as an apprehension, both symbolic and material, of one settler colonial world order giving way to another more powerful colonialist but imperial vision of North America. Letters, folklore, print culture, and literary production demonstrate how a new Anglo-American political imaginary revised and realigned centuries-old discourses on race, gender, class, religion, citizenship, power, and sovereignty. The "modern," Aranda argues, makes itself visible in cultural productions being foisted on a "conquered people," who were themselves beneficiaries of a notion of the modern that began in 1492. For Mexican Americans, modernity is less about any particular angst over global imperial designs or cultures of capitalism and more about becoming the subordinates of a nation-building project that ushers the United States into the twentieth century.
Author : James Naremore
Publisher : Indiana University Press
Page : 294 pages
File Size : 44,25 MB
Release : 1991-03-22
Category : Art
ISBN : 9780253206275
"The twelve essays in Modernity and Mass Culture provide a broad and captivating overview of what has come to be known as culture studies." --Texas Journal This is a wide-ranging analysis of the relationship among industrialization, democracy, and art in the 20th century. U.S. and British scholars discuss the interaction of "high," "popular," and "mass" art, showing how Western culture as a whole is affected by the transition from the modern to the postmodern era.