Understanding Truman Capote / Thomas Fahy.

Fahy, Thomas Richard, author.
Columbia, South Carolina : The University of South Carolina Press, [2014]
Added to CLICnet on 05/06/2016


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Part of the series Understanding contemporary American literature;Understanding contemporary American literature.
Notes:

  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
  • Understanding Truman Capote — A tree of night and other stories — Other voices, other rooms — The grass harp — The muses are heard — Breakfast at Tiffany’s — In cold blood — Three stories, answered prayers, and Capote in the twenty-first century.
  • Truman Capote–along with his most famous works In Cold Blood and Breakfast at Tiffany’s–continues to have a powerful hold over the American popular imagination. His glamorous lifestyle, which included hobnobbing with the rich and famous and frequenting the most elite nightclubs in Manhattan, makes him the subject of ongoing interest for public and academic audiences alike. In Understanding Truman Capote, Thomas Fahy provides a new direction for Capote studies that offers a way to reconsider the author’s work. 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 1940s and 1950s. Understanding Truman Capote 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 Capote studies 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.

Subjects:

Requested by Green, D.

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