Cold War Fantasies: Film, Fiction, and Foreign Policy

Portada
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, 9 oct 2001 - 261 páginas
As memories of the Cold War recede, it becomes more and more difficult to remember what it was about and why it evoked such feelings of intensity and fatalism. Fortunately, we have a gold mine of movies and novels to help us recall why an entire generation of Americans grew up ducking under school desks in air raid drills and stocking the family bomb shelter. Cold War Fantasies retrieves those times, based on the idea that a nation's history, self-concept, and collective anxiety are reflected in popular culture. In Cold War Fantasies, Ronnie Lipschutz combines an historical account of foreign and domestic politics from 1945 to 1995 with summaries and analyses of thirty novels and films contemporaneously published and produced. Lipschutz rejects the standard line on the Cold War and critically examines the impacts and effects of language and images on politics. Viewing those films and reading those novels enables the reader to come away with a clearer sense of how people felt during the Cold War period-about themselves, about 'the enemy,' and about the world while living in the shadow of the atomic bomb.
 

Índice

Film Fiction American Politics
1
From Hot War to Cold War
15
Reds among Us?
35
Spies
55
Nukes
79
The Final Frontier
103
Vietnam Over and Over
119
Renewing the Cold War
145
New Competitors Old Enemies
171
Now What?
187
Notes
201
Resources
207
Bibliography
235
Index
245
About the Author
Página de créditos

Otras ediciones - Ver todo

Términos y frases comunes

Sobre el autor (2001)

Ronnie D. Lipschutz is professor of politics at the University of California at Santa Cruz.

Información bibliográfica