首页> 外文OA文献 >The Role of Popular Mythology and Popular Culture in Post-war America, as represented by four novels - The Floating Opera and The End of the Road, by John Barth, White Noise, by Don DeLillo, and Vineland, by Thomas Pynchon.
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The Role of Popular Mythology and Popular Culture in Post-war America, as represented by four novels - The Floating Opera and The End of the Road, by John Barth, White Noise, by Don DeLillo, and Vineland, by Thomas Pynchon.

机译:战后美国大众神话和大众文化的作用,以四本小说为代表-约翰·巴特的《浮动歌剧》和《路的尽头》,唐·德利洛的唐·诺里奇和托马斯·潘琼的《葡萄园》。

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摘要

The four novels - The Floating Opera, The End of the Road, White Noise, and Vineland - are representative of the cultural shift away from traditional moral concepts after World War II. Popular culture has increasingly become the guiding force for the continuation of American society, and in Don DeLillo�s White Noise, popular culture and its creation of myth (according to the author�s representation of America) has become embedded in the system and life of contemporary America. John Barth�s novel The End of the Road and its predecessor The Floating Opera are important in any discussion of the role of popular culture and popular mythology in post-war America. They both appear to signal an end to sincere intellectual thought or debate, and the notion of imposing a rational moral world upon the social landscape surrounding the individual. The Floating Opera explores the common tendency of society to avoid difficult intellectual struggles, and the central character and first-person narrator ultimately realises that questions about the nature of existence are of no objective value. In The End of the Road the character Jacob Horner adopts a superficial reflection of pre-existing rules and social conventions. Together these novels reflect much of what is at present understood as the postmodern aesthetic, and are indicative of many of the changes in America that were about to occur. The Floating Opera was published in 1956 and The End of the Road was published in 1958, but they are still highly relevant beyond the period in which they were written. White Noise (1984) portrays a system founded on the Hollywood mythology, and the superficial reflection of pre-existing rules and social conventions found in The End of the Road. The novel revolves around the experiences of the narrator, Jack Gladney, a university lecturer who teaches Hitler studies at Blacksmith College, and his wife Babette. The course which he teaches on Hitler is influenced by Hollywood myth, and the novel portrays a consumer-based society that has lost much of the firm moral basis which traditional religious concepts formerly supplied. The role of television, Hollywood, and the idea of simulation are all explored throughout the novel and are important forces in any examination of post-war American society. Finally, in Vineland (1990) the social upheavals which occurred during the late �60s and early �70s are explored from the perspective of the 1980s. The novel refers to a vast array of images and icons from popular culture, and the brief youth rebellion, in the late �60s, which failed to inspire any final social revolution. The result of this failed social revolution is a landscape of popular culture in modern America, where Godzilla leaves footprints in Japan and popular mythology from television or pulp novels coincides with everyday life. There are references in typical Pynchonesque fashion to those who must necessarily be orchestrating these social and cultural alterations, but they, as specific individuals, remain anonymous or hidden from the scope of the author (although, as in White Noise, there are deliberate references to the CIA and other agencies or departments within the U.S. Federal Government). Vineland is important, therefore, both as an account of the social changes which occurred in America between the late �60s and �80s, and the increasing role of popular culture in America. These four novels form the basis of an exploration of the role of popular mythology and popular culture in post-war America. They form a clear progression, and allow a detailed analysis of the social and cultural changes which contemporary America has undergone since the end of World War II.
机译:四部小说-浮动歌剧,路的尽头,白噪声和葡萄园-代表了第二次世界大战后文化从传统道德观念的转变。大众文化越来越成为美国社会持续发展的指导力量,在唐·德利洛的《白噪声》中,大众文化及其神话的创造(根据作者对美国的代表)已深深植入了系统和生活中。当代美国。约翰·巴特(John Barth)的小说《路的尽头》(The End of the Road)及其前身《漂浮的歌剧》(The Floating Opera)在讨论战后美国流行文化和流行神话的作用时都很重要。它们似乎都预示着真诚的智力思想或辩论的结束,以及将理性的道德世界强加于个人周围社会景观的观念。浮动歌剧探索社会避免共同的思想斗争的共同趋势,而中心人物和第一人称叙述者最终意识到关于生存本质的问题没有客观价值。在《路的尽头》中,角色雅各布·霍纳(Jacob Horner)对以前存在的规则和社会习俗进行了肤浅的反映。这些小说共同反映了目前被理解为后现代美学的许多内容,并预示了美国即将发生的许多变化。浮动歌剧出版于1956年,《路的尽头》出版于1958年,但在其写作时期之外,它们仍然具有高度的相关性。 《白噪声》(1984)描绘了一个以好莱坞神话为基础的系统,以及对《道路的尽头》中已有规则和社会惯例的肤浅反映。小说围绕叙述者杰克·格拉德尼(Jack Gladney)和他的妻子巴贝特的经历展开,杰克·格拉德尼是一位在铁匠学院教授希特勒研究的大学讲师。他教授的有关希特勒的课程受到好莱坞神话的影响,而这部小说描写的是一个以消费者为中心的社会,该社会已经失去了传统宗教观念以前提供的牢固的道德基础。电视,好莱坞的角色和模拟的想法在整部小说中都得到了探讨,并且在战后美国社会的任何考察中都是重要的力量。最后,在Vineland(1990)中,从1980年代的角度探讨了60年代末和70年代初发生的社会动荡。小说提到了来自大众文化的大量图像和偶像,以及60年代后期的短暂青年叛乱,这些都未能激发任何最终的社会革命。这场失败的社会革命的结果是现代美国的流行文化景观,哥斯拉在日本留下了足迹,电视或纸浆小说中的流行神话与日常生活相吻合。有一些典型的愚人节风格提到那些必须策划这些社会和文化变化的人,但是作为特定的个人,他们仍然是匿名的或被作者所遮掩(尽管在《白噪声》中,有意提及CIA和美国联邦政府内的其他机构或部门)。因此,对于60年代末至80年代末美国发生的社会变化以及美国流行文化的作用日渐增强,葡萄园至关重要。这四本小说构成了探索流行神话和流行文化在战后美国中的作用的基础。它们形成了明显的进步,并允许对第二次世界大战以来当代美国经历的社会和文化变化进行详细分析。

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    Reed Mark Dobson;

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