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Preposterous Violence: Fables of Aggression in Modern Culture - Hardcover

 
9780195058871: Preposterous Violence: Fables of Aggression in Modern Culture
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From Friday the 13th movies to pro wrestling, from Stephen King novels to heavy metal music videos--violent imagery saturates our popular culture, reaping enormous profits for its creators, provoking outrage in its critics, and drawing squeals of delight from its consumers. Why do these entertainments find such huge audiences? Seeking to understand the phenomenon, rather than to condemn or defend it, James B. Twitchell offers a lively look at some modern "fables of aggression" and their historical precursors.
Twitchell begins the story in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when the "cheap thrills" available to mass audiences included bull-baiting and other blood sports, Punch-and-Judy shows, penny dreadfuls, and the illustrations of William Hogarth. In our own century, he finds the equivalents of these diversions in everything from the infamous EC comic books of the 1950s to recent television programs like The A Team and Masters of the Universe and the latest generation of video games. Twitchell examines a number of key examples in depth and suggests some intriguing reasons for their appeal. Stressing the outrageousness of the violence depicted (it is usually too ridiculous to be taken seriously) and its ritualistic nature (it thrives on repetition), he argues that it serves an important socializing function for its audience of mostly adolescent males. As he notes, adolescence is a stage in life fraught with sexual confusion and anxiety, which often surface as a craving for violent resolutions. The stylized violence of popular entertainments prepares the teenager, he says, "for the anxieties of competition and then of reproduction." Although these violent scenarios might seem to be incitive--and are in a few cases--they serve, for the most part, as cautionary tales. "Boundaries are only known once crossed," Twitchell writes. "Preposterous violence shows what is over the boundary. 'Enough! or Too Much.'"
While the mass media that provide these "fables" are usually blamed for creating stress, for showing "too much," they are, in Twitchell's view, simply fulfilling the wishes of a ready-made audience, and they have been doing so ever since such audiences could afford such diversions. The mass media translate anxieties rather than generate them, he says. "We may not want to acknowledge it," he concludes, "but these myths of preposterous violence are still with us because there is still so much of us unacknowledged in them."

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About the Author:

About the Author:
James B. Twitchell is Alumni Professor of English at the University of Florida. Among his previous books are Dreadful Pleasures: An Anatomy of Modern Horror and Forbidden Partners: The Incest Taboo in Modern Culture.
From Library Journal:
An average American four to eight years of age sees 250 war cartoons and 1000 ads for war toys each year. The cartoons have 60 to 80 acts of violence; 30-second commercials, six to eight. Survivors graduate to watch A-Team reruns that have only 40 acts of violence. Twitchell tells us not to worry. St. Augustine said circus violence produced barbarians, but we have survived circuses, gory novels, comic books, and murderous movies. Further, Marxists are wrong to think that violence is orchestrated for ruling-class ends. Barthes is mentioned here, but Foucault, Deleuze, and Derrida, who argue that the mad violence of our time is rooted in deep conceptual structures, are not in Twitchell's bibliography. Apparently, like tribal puberty rites, movie and TV violence serves to initiate the young, and in any case it is what the audience demands. Like the works it describes, this book is grimly entertaining; but could Augustine be right? --Leslie Armour, Univ. of Ottawa, Canada
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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  • PublisherOxford University Press
  • Publication date1989
  • ISBN 10 0195058879
  • ISBN 13 9780195058871
  • BindingHardcover
  • Number of pages350
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