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Desert Islands and the Liquid Modern

eBook
ISBN/EAN: 9783030570460
Umbreit-Nr.: 286999

Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 0 S., 3.88 MB
Format in cm:
Einband: Keine Angabe

Erschienen am 21.11.2020
Auflage: 1/2020


E-Book
Format: PDF
DRM: Digitales Wasserzeichen
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  • Zusatztext
    • <p></p>This book investigates desert islands in postwar anglophone popular culture, exploring representations in radio, print and screen advertising, magazine cartoons, cinema, video games, and comedy, drama and reality television. Drawing on Zygmunt Baumans theory of liquid modernity, desert island texts are analysed in terms of their intersections with repressive and seductive mechanisms of power. Chapters focus on the desert island as: a conflictingly in/coherent space that characterises identity as deferred and structured by choice; a location whose remoteness undermines satirical critiques of communal identity formation; a site whose ambivalent relationship with home and Otherness destabilises patriarchal Western subjectivity; a space bound up with mobility and instantaneity; and an expression of radical individuality and underdetermined identity. The desert island in popular culture is shown to reflect, endorse and critique a profoundly consumerist society that seduces us with promises of coherence, with the threat of repression looming if we do not conform.<p></p><p></p><div><br></div>

  • Kurztext
    • This book investigates desert islands in postwar anglophone popular culture, exploring representations in radio, print and screen advertising, magazine cartoons, cinema, video games, and comedy, drama and reality television. Drawing on Zygmunt Bauman&apos;s theory of liquid modernity, desert island texts are analysed in terms of their intersections with repressive and seductive mechanisms of power. Chapters focus on the desert island as: a conflictingly in/coherent space that characterises identity as deferred and structured by choice; a location whose &apos;remoteness&apos; undermines satirical critiques of communal identity formation; a site whose ambivalent relationship with &apos;home&apos; and Otherness destabilises patriarchal &apos;Western&apos; subjectivity; a space bound up with mobility and instantaneity; and an expression of radical individuality and underdetermined identity. The desert island in popular culture is shown to reflect, endorse and critique a profoundly consumerist society that seduces us with promises of coherence, with the threat of repression looming if we do not conform.

  • Autorenportrait
    • <p><p>Barney Samson has lectured in Literature, Film Studies and Communication& Culture at the University of Essex, the University of Roehampton, Middlesex University and City, University of London, UK.</p><br></p>
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