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Rebels without a Cause?

Renegotiating the American 1950s

by Gerd Hurm (Volume editor) Ann Marie Fallon (Volume editor)
©2007 Edited Collection 294 Pages

Summary

The figure of the rebel of the 1950s shaped the imagination of the American post-war generation. Yet the notoriety of the rebel resides uneasily beside that of the conformist, ironically one of the other central figures of the decade. This collection of essays, which originated at an international conference in Trier, Germany, in 2005, sets out to explain the multiple representations of rebellion and affirmation in 1950s American culture. It explores the ways in which rebellion was ‘contained’ and also disruptive during this pivotal decade of American ascendance on the global scene. In a series of essays written by prominent American Studies scholars in the United States and Germany, the collection explores the meaning of rebellion in the 1950s and its role in shaping theological, literary and cultural discourses.

Details

Pages
294
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039109364
Language
English
Keywords
USA Rebell (Motiv) Kongress Trier (2005) Rebellion American culture Cultural space Disruption Literatur Post-War Geschichte 1950-1959
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2007. 294 pp.

Biographical notes

Gerd Hurm (Volume editor) Ann Marie Fallon (Volume editor)

The Editors: Gerd Hurm is professor of American Literature and Culture at the University of Trier and director of the Trier Center for American Studies. His publications include monographs on modern American urban fiction and on the politics of the vernacular in Mark Twain’s writings. Ann Marie Fallon is assistant professor in the University Studies program at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon. She was a Fulbright visiting lecturer at the Trier Center for American Studies in 2004-2005. Her publications include articles on globalization and aesthetics, avant-garde writers in Cuba and Argentina and on Robinson Crusoe.

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Title: Rebels without a Cause?