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Book Review
The
Genuine Article: Race, Mass Culture, and American Literary Manhood. By Paul Gilmore.
(Durham: Duke University Press, 2001. x, 274 pp. Cloth, $54.95, ISBN
0-8223-2754-6. Paper, $18.95, ISBN 0-8223-2764-3.)
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in the 1980s multiculturalist themes began to dominate literary studies, I
thought that within a decade the fashion would pass. Not so. The thrill is
gone, but the books keep coming. By the third sentence of The Genuine
Article, we know that we can add it to the list. Sentence 1 mentions
'cultural representations of race,' sentence 2 connects them to
'questions of gender,' and sentence 3 invokes 'class formation.' The
race/gender/class sequence follows in such predictable steps that one wonders
whether the author, Paul Gilmore, was aware of just how routine it sounds.
Subsequent paragraphs recite the customary beliefs: 'the instability of
racial and gender identities,' 'the centrality of race to broader notions
of middle-class manhood,' 'inherent contradictions of capitalism,' and
the 'contingency of distinctions between high and low, male and female,
white, black, and red.' |
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