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How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV Marcie Frank

How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV By Marcie Frank

How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV by Marcie Frank


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Summary

An analysis of how Gore Vidal, as a public intellectual, negotiates the print/screen media divide

How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV Summary

How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV: The Lessons of Gore Vidal by Marcie Frank

Novelist, television personality, political candidate, and maverick social commentator, Gore Vidal is one of the most innovative, influential, and enduring American intellectuals of the past fifty years. In How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV, Marcie Frank provides a concise introduction to Vidals life and work as she argues that the twentieth-century shift from print to electronic media, particularly TV and film, has not only loomed large in Vidals thought but also structured his career. Looking at Vidals prolific literary output, Frank shows how he has reflected explicitly on this subject at every turn: in essays on politics, his book on Hollywood and history, his reviews and interviews, and topical excursions within the novels. At the same time, she traces how he has repeatedly crossed the line supposedly separating print and electronic culture, perhaps with more success than any other American intellectual. He has written television serials and screenplays, appeared in movies, and regularly appeared on television, most famously in heated arguments with Norman Mailer on The Dick Cavett Show and with William F. Buckley during ABCs coverage of the 1968 Democratic National Convention.

Frank highlights the connections between Vidals attitudes toward TV, sex, and American politics as they have informed his literary and political writings and screen appearances. She deftly situates his public persona in relation to those of Andy Warhol, Jacqueline Susann, Mary McCarthy, Susan Sontag, and others. By describing Vidals shrewd maneuvering between different media, Frank suggests that his career offers a model to aspiring public intellectuals and a refutation to those who argue that electronic media have eviscerated public discourse.

How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV Reviews

How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV is an illuminating, wide-ranging, and provocative examination of Gore Vidals mulitple public identitiesnovelist, screenwriter, political commentator, TV personality. Marcie Franks insights into Vidals unique career and the cultural context in which it unfolded will appeal to anyone with an interest in American popular and literary cultures and the places where the two intersect.Tom Perrotta, author of the novels Little Children, Joe College, and Election
While other literary-minded writers of his generation (Updike, Bellow, Baldwin, Roth) barricaded themselves in bookchat, Gore Vidal took the full plunge into the new media age. There is no comparable figure to suture the two worlds, or two epochs.Michael Warner, author of Sex, Politics, and the Ethics of Queer Life
With her pithy deadpan and unresting curiosity, Marcie Frank is a wonderful interlocutor for Vidal. Fusing a startling range of recent histories, her short book is full of satisfying double-takes and provocations.Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, author of Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity
Ultimately, for mass communication historians, Franks book primarily is a specific wake-up call about the possibilities of studying novelists as news sources of many times and even as newsworthy figures, and a general wake-up call about the lack of research (at least in the United States because Europe is far ahead here) on journalism, other mass media, and intellectuals (public or not). -- Dane S. Claussen * Journalism History *

About Marcie Frank

Marcie Frank is Professor of English at Concordia University in Montreal.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1
1. The Print Intellectual 17
2. The Screen Intellectual 41
3. A Fine Romance 69
4. Sexual Politics in the Print-Screen Circuit 91
5. TV: Another Erogenous Zone 111
Notes 143
Index 151

Additional information

GOR003698045
9780822336402
0822336405
How to Be an Intellectual in the Age of TV: The Lessons of Gore Vidal by Marcie Frank
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Duke University Press
2005-10-25
176
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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