Description

Book Synopsis
The Myth of Popular Culture

In this fascinating examination of popular culture, esteemed cultural critic Perry Meisel shatters conventionally held notions about the division between high and low culture with the provocative theory that popular culture has sustained dialectical rhythms. Meisel's deft critical analysis of three enduring cultural traditions the American novel, Hollywood, and British and American rock music leads us to question the very concept of the division between high and low culture.

Meisel begins his engaging discussion by refuting philosopher Theodor Adorno's assertion that high culture is dialectical and pop is not, showing that popular culture does indeed have a conversation both with its sources and with cultural authority as a whole. In the final section, Meisel turns his attention to Bob Dylan, a figure who, more than any other, shows what it means to synthesize and revise all traditions music, poetry, iconography and transform them completel

Table of Contents
Preface: The Resistance to Pop

Acknowledgments

Part I "The Battle of the Brows"

1. A History of High and Low

"Highbrow," "Lowbrow," "Middlebrow"

"Folk" and "Soul"

Dante’s Republic

"General Converse": Johnson and the Long Eighteenth Century

"Similitude in Dissimilitude"

Keats and Mediocrity

Culture and Anarchy in the UK

"The Battle of the Brows"

"Kitsch"

The Myth of Popular Culture

2. Pop Culture in the Spectator

Poems of the People

Canons and "Camp"

Base and Superstructure, Soma and Psyche

3. Pop and Postmodernism

The Social Self

Andy Warhol

"Hey, Rapunzel, Let Down Your Hair"

Part II Dialectics of Pop

4. The Death of Kings: American Fiction from Cooper to Chandler

"Paleface" and "Redskin," Cowboy and Dandy

Pathfinding: Cooper and Mark Twain

Labor, Leisure, Love: Melville, James, Hemingway

Transatlantic: Raymond Chandler

5. Knock on Any Door: Three Histories of Hollywood

Ars Gratia Artis

Benjamin, Bazin, Eisenstein

Dialectics of Directing: Hawks, Welles, Scorsese

Dialectics of Acting: Barrymore, Bogart, Brando

Blonde on Blonde: Harlow and Monroe

Hang ’Em High: Welles, Lewis, Eastwood

6. The Blues Misreading of Gospel: A History of Rock and Roll

A Scandal in Bohemia

Jazz Myth, Jazz Reality

Soul Synthesis

Plugging In

Buddy Holly and the British Invasion

The Body English

Part III The World of Bob Dylan

7. Dylan and the Critics

Falling

The Limits of Typology

Dylan as Poet

8. Words and Music

Fractions

"Slippin’ and Slidin’"

Dylan and Deferred Action

9. Dylan Himself

The Death of the Author

The Grand Tour and the Middle Passage

Hortatory

10. The Three Icons: Sinatra, Presley, Dylan

Iconography and Gender

The Fedora as Phallus

Elvis as Bobbysoxer

"My Darling Young One"

Works Cited

Index

The Myth of Popular Culture

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    A Paperback / softback by Perry Meisel

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 11/12/2009
      ISBN13: 9781405199346, 978-1405199346
      ISBN10: 1405199342
      Also in:
      Popular culture

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Myth of Popular Culture

      In this fascinating examination of popular culture, esteemed cultural critic Perry Meisel shatters conventionally held notions about the division between high and low culture with the provocative theory that popular culture has sustained dialectical rhythms. Meisel's deft critical analysis of three enduring cultural traditions the American novel, Hollywood, and British and American rock music leads us to question the very concept of the division between high and low culture.

      Meisel begins his engaging discussion by refuting philosopher Theodor Adorno's assertion that high culture is dialectical and pop is not, showing that popular culture does indeed have a conversation both with its sources and with cultural authority as a whole. In the final section, Meisel turns his attention to Bob Dylan, a figure who, more than any other, shows what it means to synthesize and revise all traditions music, poetry, iconography and transform them completel

      Table of Contents
      Preface: The Resistance to Pop

      Acknowledgments

      Part I "The Battle of the Brows"

      1. A History of High and Low

      "Highbrow," "Lowbrow," "Middlebrow"

      "Folk" and "Soul"

      Dante’s Republic

      "General Converse": Johnson and the Long Eighteenth Century

      "Similitude in Dissimilitude"

      Keats and Mediocrity

      Culture and Anarchy in the UK

      "The Battle of the Brows"

      "Kitsch"

      The Myth of Popular Culture

      2. Pop Culture in the Spectator

      Poems of the People

      Canons and "Camp"

      Base and Superstructure, Soma and Psyche

      3. Pop and Postmodernism

      The Social Self

      Andy Warhol

      "Hey, Rapunzel, Let Down Your Hair"

      Part II Dialectics of Pop

      4. The Death of Kings: American Fiction from Cooper to Chandler

      "Paleface" and "Redskin," Cowboy and Dandy

      Pathfinding: Cooper and Mark Twain

      Labor, Leisure, Love: Melville, James, Hemingway

      Transatlantic: Raymond Chandler

      5. Knock on Any Door: Three Histories of Hollywood

      Ars Gratia Artis

      Benjamin, Bazin, Eisenstein

      Dialectics of Directing: Hawks, Welles, Scorsese

      Dialectics of Acting: Barrymore, Bogart, Brando

      Blonde on Blonde: Harlow and Monroe

      Hang ’Em High: Welles, Lewis, Eastwood

      6. The Blues Misreading of Gospel: A History of Rock and Roll

      A Scandal in Bohemia

      Jazz Myth, Jazz Reality

      Soul Synthesis

      Plugging In

      Buddy Holly and the British Invasion

      The Body English

      Part III The World of Bob Dylan

      7. Dylan and the Critics

      Falling

      The Limits of Typology

      Dylan as Poet

      8. Words and Music

      Fractions

      "Slippin’ and Slidin’"

      Dylan and Deferred Action

      9. Dylan Himself

      The Death of the Author

      The Grand Tour and the Middle Passage

      Hortatory

      10. The Three Icons: Sinatra, Presley, Dylan

      Iconography and Gender

      The Fedora as Phallus

      Elvis as Bobbysoxer

      "My Darling Young One"

      Works Cited

      Index

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