A critical and cultural poetics of the end: Self, space, and volatility in Los Angeles

Item

Title
A critical and cultural poetics of the end: Self, space, and volatility in Los Angeles
Identifier
d_2009_2013:d8c4f2e78625:10334
identifier
10510
Creator
Albanese, Pamela,
Contributor
Ammiel Alcalay
Date
2010
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Comparative literature | American literature | Film studies | Cultural Studies | Film | Literature | Los Angeles
Abstract
A Critical and Cultural Poetics of the End: Self, Space, and Volatility in Los Angeles delineates the correspondences between Los Angeles spaces---exterior, topographical, architectural, and imaginary---and aspects of the self---interiority, identity, experience, and desire---in fictional and non-fictional depictions of Los Angeles. Through close readings of key Los Angeles novels, essays, and films, this project emphasizes how the narrative "I" traverses urban space, focusing on the dissolution of boundaries between self and place. Los Angeles' sprawling, decentralized layout and rapidly-shifting landscape have a profound influence on narrative identity, generating a volatile and disquieting sense of self; this project also explores how the city's unique spatial orientation contributes to a literature and cinema of disillusionment exclusive to Los Angeles.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Comparative Literature