Reviews
"An innovative examination of the idea of authenticity and its significance to postwar American culture. Cheever reveals that what was cast as a concern with conformity was actually often a fear of uniformity, and her discerning critical eye finds that anxiety expressed in a surprising range of postwar genres—as prevalent in stories of serial killers and teenage loners as it was in tales of passing and corporate ambition. Her study gives us a new grasp on the contours of the postwar self."
—Sean McCann, author of A Pinnacle of Feeling: American Literature and Presidential Government
Description
Real Phonies examines the twinned phenomena of phoniness and authenticity across the second half of the twentieth century—beginning with adolescents in the 1950s like Holly Golightly and Holden Caulfield, and ending with mid-career professionals in the 1990s, like sports agent Jerry Maguire. Countering the critical assumption that, with the emergence of postmodernity, the ideal of “authentic self” disappeared, Cheever argues that concern with the authenticity of persons proliferated throughout the past half-century despite a significant ambiguity over what that self might look like.
Cheever’s analysis is structured around five key kinds of characters: adolescents, the insane, serial killers, and the figures of the assimilated Jew and the “company man.” In particular, she finds a preoccupation in these works not so much with faked conformity but with the frightening notion of real uniformity—the notion that Holly, and others like her, could each genuinely be the same as everyone else.
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| Paper List price: Your price: 2/1/2010 |