
Life between Two Deaths, 1989-2001: U.S. Culture in the Long Nineties
Philip E. Wegner
Wegner shows how phenomena including the debate on globalization, neoliberal notions of the end of history, the explosive growth of the Internet, the efflorescence of new architectural and urban planning projects, developments in literary and cultural production, new turns in theory and philosophy, and the rapid growth of the antiglobalization movement came to characterize the long nineties. He offers readings of some of the most interesting cultural texts of the era: Don DeLillo’s White Noise; Joe Haldeman’s Forever trilogy; Octavia Butler’s Parable novels; the Terminator films; the movies Fight Club, Independence Day, Cape Fear, and Ghost Dog; and the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In so doing, he illuminates fundamental issues concerning narrative, such as how beginnings and endings are recognized and how relationships between events are constructed.
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About Philip E. Wegner
Reviews for Life between Two Deaths, 1989-2001: U.S. Culture in the Long Nineties
Chadwick Jenkins
PopMatters
“Life between Two Deaths builds to a stirring defense not only of monstrous forms of community and agency that might point the way to a better future, but also—perhaps more important at the current juncture—of the ‘difficult, painful, and gradual process of education and action’ necessary to realize them (164). If the present moment feels like a return to the 1990s—with clear narratives of good and evil giving way to dispersed and at times wearying sites of political struggle—this may be an odd index of hope.”
Andrew Hoberek
American Literature
“Life Between Two Deaths demonstrates the vitality of theoretical discourse today, especially because, in Wegner’s methodology, theory and fiction both perform critical, theoretical work. . . . Wegner’s Life Between Two Deaths contributes to a growing body of scholarship that fi nds in the 1990s a coherent cultural period as well as a site of possibility, repetition, and transition. As such, it provides a theoretical and historical framework that should be generative for further work on the decade. . .”
Daniel Worden
Reviews in Cultural Theory
“This is a highly accomplished, original, expansive work that makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of 1990s American cultural production. . .”
Jennie Chapman
Utopian Studies