Milton Public Library

Bio-politicizing Cary Grant, pressing race, class and ethnicity into service in "Amerika", Joshua David Gonsalves

Label
Bio-politicizing Cary Grant, pressing race, class and ethnicity into service in "Amerika", Joshua David Gonsalves
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Bio-politicizing Cary Grant
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Joshua David Gonsalves
Sub title
pressing race, class and ethnicity into service in "Amerika"
Summary
Who will Cary Grant have been when the future runs out? In the atrocity-rich wake of Hiroshima, Cold War America is enriched beyond belief. Hollywood radiates, in turn, images of a consumer utopia crisscrossed by segregation, social mobility, racial passing, anxieties about ethnicity and "white panic". Cary Grant's class-less classiness seems to denote this (sub)urban leisure class without an effort, yet he signifies more than this: ambivalent, bisex'd, intersected by the biopolitics of racialization, the policing of sexual agency and stereotypical ethnic identifications (including the invisible Anglo instanced by the high-angle shot). If biopolitics signifies the individuated control of populations, Bio-Politicizing Cary Grant: Pressing Race, Class and Ethnicity into Service in Amerika locates this anxious racialization of service persons, interracial sexuality and social mobility (passing) in an Americanized simulacrum of the Mediterranean world in To Catch a Thief (1955) and in a New York/Northeast-centered USA in North by Northwest (1959). Bio-Politicizing Cary Grant queries the criticism of Alfred J. Hitchcock's films, so as, to historically situate one of the first free agents in Hollywood. Yet, this semblance of freedom pays a price in meat, murder, massification and the organized homicide of Cold War geopolitics. The book explicates, in sum, the ethnic, racial and sexual ambiguity of Cary Grant's star persona as both an inculcation of (and resistance to) biopolitical imperatives in fifties-era "America"
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content