Literary Obscenities : U.S. Case Law and Naturalism after Modernism

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Tác giả: Erik Bachman

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: University Park, PA : Penn State University Press, 2017

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: Tài liệu truy cập mở

ID: 238714

In Literary Obscenities, Erik Bachman offers a comparative historical account of the parallel development of legal obscenity and literary modernism in this period. Getting Off the Page demonstrates that obscenity trials in the early twentieth century staged a wide-ranging cultural debate about the broader ramifications of the printed word's power to "deprave," "excite," and offend-or, more generally, to incite emotion and shape behavior. Bachman shows that far from seeking simply to transgress cultural norms or sexual boundaries, proscribed authors such as Wyndham Lewis, Erskine Caldwell, Lillian Smith, and James T. Farrell refigured the capacity of writing to evoke the obscene so that readers might become aware of the social processes by which they were being turned into mass consumers, voyeurs, and racialized subjects.
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