Metropolis: The American City in Popular Culture

Metropolis: The American City in Popular Culture

by Robert Zecker
ISBN-10:
027599712X
ISBN-13:
9780275997120
Pub. Date:
12/30/2007
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10:
027599712X
ISBN-13:
9780275997120
Pub. Date:
12/30/2007
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
Metropolis: The American City in Popular Culture

Metropolis: The American City in Popular Culture

by Robert Zecker

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Overview

Ever since the rise of mass culture, the idea of The City has played a central role in the nation's imagined landscape. While some writers depict the city as a site of pleasure and enjoyment, the thrills provided there are still generally of an illicit nature, and it is this darker strain of urban fiction-one that illuminates many of the larger fears and anxieties of America at large-that this book addresses. From The Wire's Baltimore to Martin Scorsese's New York, from the Newark of Philip Roth and The Sopranos, to Jeffrey Eugenides's Detroit, The City is everywhere, and everywhere proclaiming on the rise and

Around 1900, writers for Harper's, Century, and other magazines took middle-class Americans on safari through Little Italy and the Jewish Lower East Side. Later, at the dawn of the talkies, one of the most popular genres was the gangster film, through which the city was often portrayed as a powerful force that sent poor souls to their doom. With the urban disturbances of the 1960s, popular culture took another look at the city and decided that from Detroit to Watts to Harlem, the problem had a different face. Blaxploitation classics such as Shaft and Fort Apache the Bronx, as well as police and crime films of the '60s and '70s, offered a cinematic exclamation point to the famous Daily News headline: Ford to New York: Drop Dead!

Later filmmakers offered a more nuanced view of the city, with Scorsese and Coppola paying homage to an old neighborhood of wise guys and goodfellas, and Woody Allen offering the city as a home of urban aesthetes. Meanwhile, on television, crime shows (from The Streets of San Francisco to NYPD Blue, Cops, and all the CSI programs) have for decades rooted their separate identities in the crime-ridden city itself. Yesterday's foreign threat to the body politic is today's jaded suburbanite, and this work also considers the current development of the cyber-city where urban exiles use their computers to re-imagine the cities of their youth as safe, warm places where we never locked our doors. The City continues to thrill and repulse, and even the Internet once again reduces the mean streets to a titillating story arc.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275997120
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/30/2007
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 296
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

Robert Zecker is Professor of History at Saint Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia. He has taught courses on immigration and ethnicity, race in America, U.S. social movements, class, and urban studies, and has published numerous articles and a book chapter on immigration.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. Next Stop, the Ghetto: Tours of Ethnic Exotica in the Popular Press
3. "A Problem That We, the Public, Must Solve": The Gangster Film
4. "Certain Sociological Realities There": A City for the 1960s and Beyond
5. "All of Life Was There Before": The Urban Nostalgic Memoir
6. "We Never Locked Our Doors at Night": Newark on the Net, minus the Mob
Conclusion
Notes
Index

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