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Pleasing to the I : The Culture of Personality and Its Representations in Theodore Dreiser and F. Scott Fitzgerald

Part of the Mainzer Studien zur Amerikanistik series
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This book discusses how Theodore Dreiser and F. Scott Fitzgerald alongside other novelists enforced in their usage and interpretation of the term« personality a newly emerging vision of self in American society.

This vision was other-directed: many Americans meant to impress their social surroundings through consciously cultivating personality as a social stimulus value, which they hoped would ceaselessly further their social station.

Anticipating the discourses in other cultural forms, the early twentieth-century American novelists warned that individuals' repeated endeavors to define themselves outwardly would inevitably lead to identity loss and depression.

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£79.00 Save 20.00%
RRP £98.75
Product Details
Peter Lang GmbH
3631523955 / 9783631523957
Paperback / softback
30/01/2006
Germany
454 pages
148 x 210 mm, 600 grams