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Dark Places: Crime and Politics in the Personal Noir of James Ellroy

Anderson, Erik(Contributions by)Babbitt, Paul(Contributions by)Barndt, Susan McWilliams(Contributions by)Bartlett, Lexey A.(Contributions by)Becker, Jeffrey A.(Contributions by)Condit, Deirdre(Contributions by)Coulter, Caitlin B.(Contributions by)Green, W. John(Contributions by)Hamlin, Darrell A.(Contributions by)Romance, Joseph(Contributions by)Hamlin, Darrell A.(Edited by)Romance, Joseph(Edited by)
Part of the Politics, literature, and film series
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James Ellroy has mined the darkest corners of the American experience, public and private, to paint a landscape of corrupt hearts, minds, and institutions. Ellroy is particularly notable for exploring the connection between the murder of his own mother, when he was ten years old, and his troubled adolescence and early adulthood struggles with addiction. "Dead people belong to the live people who claim them most obsessively," he wrote in the memoir My Dark Places. Dark Places: Crime and Politics in the Personal Noir of James Ellroy will explore connections between politics, art, history, memory, and crime -- Ellroy's personal noir. The editors here present an interdisciplinary collection of essays, each with insight and argument into the pressurized, and at times, highly personal literary production of one of the most critically and commercially successful authors of our time. These contributions, scholarly yet accessible, offer compelling and provocative maps into the terrain of Ellroy's fiction and non-fiction, drawing focus as well on film adaptations of his work.

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Product Details
Lexington Books
1666926019 / 9781666926019
eBook (EPUB)
813.54
17/11/2023
English
242 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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