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9%OFFJonathan Auerbach - Dark Borders: Film Noir and American Citizenship - 9780822350064 - V9780822350064
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Dark Borders: Film Noir and American Citizenship

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Description for Dark Borders: Film Noir and American Citizenship Paperback. Shows how politics and aesthetics merge in American film noirs made between the late 1930s and the mid-1950s; their oft-noted uncanniness betrays the fear that un-American foes lurk within the homeland. Num Pages: 280 pages, 24 photographs. BIC Classification: 1KBB; APFN; JFC. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 234 x 154 x 17. Weight in Grams: 402.
Dark Borders connects anxieties about citizenship and national belonging in midcentury America to the sense of alienation conveyed by American film noir. Jonathan Auerbach provides in-depth interpretations of more than a dozen of these dark crime thrillers, considering them in relation to U.S. national security measures enacted from the mid-1930s to the mid-1950s. The growth of a domestic intelligence-gathering apparatus before, during, and after the Second World War raised unsettling questions about who was American and who was not, and how to tell the difference. Auerbach shows how politics and aesthetics merge in these noirs, whose oft-noted uncanniness betrays the ... Read more

Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2011
Publisher
Duke University Press
Number of pages
288
Condition
New
Number of Pages
280
Place of Publication
North Carolina, United States
ISBN
9780822350064
SKU
V9780822350064
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1

About Jonathan Auerbach
Jonathan Auerbach is Professor of English at the University of Maryland, College Park. He is the author of Body Shots: Early Cinema’s Incarnations; Male Call: Becoming Jack London, also published by Duke University Press; and The Romance of Failure: First-Person Fictions of Poe, Hawthorne, and James.

Reviews for Dark Borders: Film Noir and American Citizenship
“This terrific book offers fresh insight into both the genre of film noir and the cultural production of the postwar and early Cold War period. Through rich, historically contextualized readings of a range of noir films, Jonathan Auerbach shows how the genre captured the uncanniness of a time of suspicion and paranoia. By illuminating the uncanny figures (the immigrants, the ... Read more

Goodreads reviews for Dark Borders: Film Noir and American Citizenship


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