
Attribution
Mary F. CoreyPublication Details
BookHarvard University Press1999Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (UPPER LEVEL) PN4900.N35 C67 1999 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
Today The New Yorker is one of a number of general-interest magazines published for a sophisticated audience, but in the post-World War II era the magazine occupied a truly significant niche of cultural authority. She delineates the effort to fuse liberal ideals with aspirations to high social status, finds the magazine’s blind spots with regard to women and racial and ethnic stereotyping, and explores its abiding concern with elite consumption coupled with a contempt for mass production and popular advertising. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
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Notes
- "At midcentury, The New Yorker magazine occupied an unsurpassed niche of cultural authority, wielding a power without precedent in the magazine market. In this period a small but influential community of readers relied on The New Yorker as a guide to the emerging postwar world, turning to it for information about Broadway theater, Parisian pret-a-porter, Italian Communism, the bombing of Bikini Atoll, English movies, and French wines. A well- known critic lamented that "certain groups have come to communicate almost exclusively in references to the [magazine's] sacred writings." The World through a Monocle is a study of these "sacred writings."" "Mary Corey mines the magazine’s mix of journalism, fiction, advertisements, cartoons, and poetry to unearth a kind of New Yorker Village - a locale of contradiction and delight, of self- importance and social justice. She exposes a magazine with blind spots in regard to women and to racial and ethnic stereotyping, but which nevertheless strove towards liberal ideals, publishing the work of Rachel Carson, John Hersey, Hannah Arendt, and others. She recreates an audience that devoured ads for luxury items while avidly absorbing social criticism and political engagement. Balancing the wish to live well with the aim to do good, The New Yorker provided what seemed like a coherent value system in an incoherent world."–BOOK JACKET
Contents
- Preface: First Things
- 1. The Lay of the Land
- 2. Beyond the Manhattan Skyline
- 3. Red Hunting and the New Yorker Village
- 4. Slouching toward Anti-Communism
- 5. The New Yorker in Black and White
- 6. The Romance of the Other
- 7. Managing with Servants
- 8. The War between Men and Women
- 9. Goods and Goodness
- Conclusion: Fault Lines
ISBN
- 0674961935
LCCN
Open Library ID
-

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