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Stranger America: A Narrative Ethics of Exclusion
Contributor(s): Toth, Josh (Author)

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ISBN: 0813941113     ISBN-13: 9780813941110
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
OUR PRICE: $41.48  

Binding Type: Paperback - See All Available Formats & Editions
Published: April 2018
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Click for more in this series: Cultural Frames, Framing Culture
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Ethics & Moral Philosophy
- Literary Criticism | Science Fiction & Fantasy
- Philosophy | Political
Dewey: 810.935
LCCN: 2017053870
Series: Cultural Frames, Framing Culture
Physical Information: 0.67" H x 6" W x 9" L (0.97 lbs) 298 pages
Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Price on Product
Review Citations: Choice 01/01/2019
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Contradictory ideals of egalitarianism and self-reliance haunt America's democratic state. We need look no further than Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign and victory for proof that early twentieth-century anxieties about individualism, race, and the foreign or intrusive "other" persist today. In Stranger America, Josh Toth tracks and delineates these anxieties in America's aesthetic production, finally locating a potential narrative strategy for circumnavigating them.

Toth's central focus is, simply, strangeness--or those characters who adamantly resist being fixed in any given category of identity. As with the theorists employed (Nancy, Žižek, Derrida, Freud, Hegel), the subjects and literature considered are as encompassing as possible: from the work of Herman Melville, William Faulkner, James Weldon Johnson, and Nella Larsen to that of Philip K. Dick, Woody Allen, Larry David, and Bob Dylan; from the rise of nativism in the early twentieth century to object-oriented ontology and the twenty-first-century zombie craze; from ragtime and the introduction of sound in American cinema to the exhaustion of postmodern metafiction.

Toth argues that American literature, music, film, and television can show us the path toward a new ethic, one in which we organize identity around the stranger rather than resorting to tactics of pure exclusion or inclusion. Ultimately, he provides a new narrative approach to otherness that seeks to realize a truly democratic form of community.

 
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