Credit Culture

£83.00

Credit Culture

The Politics of Money in the American Novel of the 1970s

Biography, Literature and Literary studies Literature: history and criticism Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000 Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers History

Author: Nicky Marsh

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Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 16 July 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9781108875646


Introduction

This book offers a new reading of the relationship between money, culture and literature in America in the 1970s. The gold standard ended at the start of this decade, a moment which is routinely treated as a catalyst for the era of postmodern abstraction.

Alternative Narrative

This book provides an alternative narrative, one that traces the racialized and gendered histories of credit offered by the intertextual narratives of writers such as E.L Doctorow, Toni Morrison, Marilyn French, William Gaddis, Thomas Pynchon and Don De Lillo.

Argument

It argues that money in the 1970s is better read through a narrative of political consolidation than formal rupture as these histories foreground the closing down, rather than opening up, of serious debates about what American money should be and who it should serve.

Significance

These novels and this moment remain important because they alert us to imagine the alternative histories of credit that were imaginatively proposed but never realized.

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