[BOOK][B] The cultural front: The laboring of American culture in the twentieth century

M Denning - 1998 - books.google.com
M Denning
1998books.google.com
"" The cultural front," James T. Farrell once wrote, was made up of" commercial writers, high-
priced Hollywood scenarists, a motley assortment of mystery-plot mechanics, humorists,
newspaper columnists, stripteasers, band leaders, glamour girls, actors, press agents,
Broadway producers, aging wives with thwarted literary ambitions, and other such
ornaments of American culture." The cultural front, that extraordinary upsurge of cultural
activity and theory in America, was born in the Great Depression as communists sought to …
"" The cultural front," James T. Farrell once wrote, was made up of" commercial writers, high-priced Hollywood scenarists, a motley assortment of mystery-plot mechanics, humorists, newspaper columnists, stripteasers, band leaders, glamour girls, actors, press agents, Broadway producers, aging wives with thwarted literary ambitions, and other such ornaments of American culture." The cultural front, that extraordinary upsurge of cultural activity and theory in America, was born in the Great Depression as communists sought to organize cultural workers against Fascism and crisis-ridden capitalism. Spawned by the Popular Front of the Communist Party, the cultural front grew to encompass virtually every aspect of high and popular art in the US during the 1930s and beyond. Thoroughly infused with a radically popular and oppositional mentality, the cultural front informed one of the most culturally exciting and rich periods in American history--a veritable" Second American Renaissance," in the words of Michael Denning. In The Cultural Front, Denning lifts the lid on a period which cracks open the great debate in contemporary cultural studies of" high" versus" low" culture--a period in which artists and intellectuals rubbed shoulders with activists and workers, all striving in various ways to create a genuinely democratic popular culture. From Disney animators to proletarian novelists, and encompassing the likes of Orson Welles, Duke Ellington, John Dos Passos, CLR James and Billie Holiday, Denning charts a scene which not only fused art and popular protest but also left a deep imprint on American cufture and society today."--Pub. desc.
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