Review
"...this povacative, wide-ranging study..." -- Robert Miklitsch, Film Quarterly
Book Description
The first book to treat issues of race and ethnicity as related to noir, offering a cultural history of twentieth-century America through episodic readings of films, photographs, and literature.
About the Author
Paula Rabinowitz is professor of English at the University of Minnesota. She is author of Labor and Desire: Women's Revolutionary Fiction in Depression America and They Must Be Represented: The Politics of Documentary.
Black and White and Noir: America's Pulp Modernism FROM THE PUBLISHER
Black & White & Noir explores America´s pulp modernism through penetrating readings of the noir sensibility lurking in an eclectic array of media: Office of War Information photography, women´s experimental films, and African-American novels, among others. It traces the dark edges of cultural detritus blowing across the postwar landscape, finding in pulp a political theory that helps explain America´s fascination with lurid spectacles of crime. We are accustomed to thinking of noir as a film form popularized in movies like The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep, and, more recently, Quentin Tarantino´s Pulp Fiction. But it is also, Paula Rabinowitz argues, an avenue of social and political expression. This book offers an unparalleled historical and theoretical overview of the noir shadows cast when the media´s glare is focused on the unseen and the unseemly in our culture. Through far-ranging discussions of the Starr Report, movies such as Double Indemnity and The Big Heat, and figures as various as Barbara Stanwyck, Kenneth Fearing, and Richard Wright, Rabinowitz finds in film noir the representation of modern America´s attempt to submerge and mask its violent history of racial and class anatagonisms. Black & White & Noir also explores the theory and practice of stilettos, the ways in which girls in the 1950s viewed film noir as a secret language about their mothers´ pasts, the extraordinary tone-setting photographs of Esther Bubley, and the smutty aspect of social workers´ case studies, among other unexpected twists and provocative turns.
SYNOPSIS
Noir, or pulp fiction, permeates daily life in newspapers, on Hollywood screens, in fashion, and in the cultural fascination with lurid crime trials involving white women and black men, such as the O.J. Simpson trial. Rabinowitz sees pulp fiction as a kind of political theory that has its origins in two submerged aspects of American modernit