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American underworlds: Space and narrative in the twentieth-century urban novel.

机译:美国黑社会:20世纪都市小说中的空间与叙事。

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摘要

This dissertation scrutinizes the constructions of ethnic, racial, sexual, and criminal underworlds in American culture and literature of the modern and postmodern periods. The underworld, I contend, is a shifting and unstable metaphor, one that designates newly produced social formations that are created through the concatenation of social and spatial marginality. I argue that the underworld in American literature should be understood as an effect of forces that are transacted at the macroeconomic level at which capitalism has historically evolved and through its logic of uneven development has left its mark on the city's changing spatiality and at the discursive level where criminal anthropology, theories of degeneration, Chicago School sociology, urban planning, and post-WWII theories of racial pathology formulate and theorize the underworld. A close interrogation of the underworld's representation in American literature reveals, I show, the ways in which narrative and genre are reshaped by an engagement with this discursively produced, real-and-imagined population, living in a condensed, and often literally subterranean, sphere. Which populations are considered underworld changes, I argue, over the twentieth century, as an expression of emerging cultural anxieties about crime, class, sex, disease, race, social justice, and the city. In the twentieth-century American novel, the underworld is a contested realm constructed socio-historically and linguistically, a domain where historical exclusions and law both (de)form bodies and produce new possibilities for human solidarity, pleasure, and survival in the 'lower' terrains of the urban. Focusing on works by Henry James, Djuna Barnes, Dashiell Hammett, Mickey Spillane, Ralph Ellison, Chester Himes, and Don DeLillo, I contend that these writers deploy new narratological strategies that map the marginalized social spaces of this purportedly lurid and libidinal realm in ways that test and reproduce the unequal social relations that create spatial unevenness. This dissertation discloses how the underworld has changed historically, how narratives from James to DeLillo represent its changing character, and how these changes are tied to the upper stratum's imposed spatializations.
机译:本文研究了近代和后现代时期美国文化和文学中种族,种族,性和犯罪黑社会的建构。我认为,黑社会是一个不断变化且不稳定的隐喻,它指代通过社会和空间边际的串联而产生的新产生的社会形态。我认为,应将美国文学中的黑社会理解为是在宏观经济层面上进行交易的力量所产生的影响,在这一层面上,资本主义已经演变,并通过其不均衡发展的逻辑在城市不断变化的空间和话语层面上留下了印记。在这里,犯罪人类学,变性理论,芝加哥学校社会学,城市规划以及第二次世界大战后的种族病理学理论都对黑社会进行了阐述和理论化。我展示了对美国文学中黑社会形象的严密审视,揭示了叙事和体裁是如何通过与这种散漫产生的,真实的和想象的人群互动而重塑的,这些人群生活在一个密集的,通常是地下的领域中。我认为,在二十世纪,哪些人口被认为是黑社会的变化,这是对犯罪,阶级,性别,疾病,种族,社会正义和城市的新兴文化焦虑的一种表达。在二十世纪的美国小说中,黑社会是一个有争议的领域,它是从社会历史和语言角度构建的,在这个领域中,历史排斥和法律都形成了实体,并为人类的团结,愉悦和生存提供了新的可能性。的城市地形。我着眼于亨利·詹姆斯(Henry James),杜纳·巴恩斯(Djuna Barnes),达西耶尔·哈米特(Dashiell Hammett),米奇·斯皮兰(Mickey Spillane),拉尔夫·埃里森(Ralph Ellison),切斯特·希姆斯(Chester Himes)和唐·德利洛(Don DeLillo)的作品,我认为这些作家采用了新的叙事学策略,以一定的方式勾勒出了这个所谓的色情和性欲领域的边缘化社会空间。测试并再现了造成空间不平衡的不平等社会关系。本文揭示了黑社会在历史上是如何变化的,从詹姆斯到德利洛的叙述如何表现其变化的特征,以及这些变化如何与上层施加的空间化联系在一起。

著录项

  • 作者

    Heise, William Thomas.;

  • 作者单位

    New York University.;

  • 授予单位 New York University.;
  • 学科 Literature American.; History United States.; Sociology Social Structure and Development.; American Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2005
  • 页码 480 p.
  • 总页数 480
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 美洲史;社会结构和社会关系;
  • 关键词

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