A space on the side of the road : cultural poetics in an "other" America
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A space on the side of the road : cultural poetics in an "other" America
(Princeton paperbacks)
Princeton University Press, c1996
- : pbk.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [217]-238) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
A "Space on the Side of the Road" vividly evokes an "other" America that survives precariously among the ruins of the West Virginia coal camps and "hollers". To Kathleen Stewart, this particular "other" exists as an excluded subtext to the American narrative of capitalism, modernisation, materialism, and democray. In towns like Amigo, Red Jacket, Helen, Odd, Viper, Decoy, and Twilight, men and women "just settin" track a dense social imaginary through stories of traumas, apparitions, encounters, and eccentricities. Stewart explores how this rhythmic, dramatic, and complicated story-telling imbues everyday life in the hills and forms a cultural poetics. Alternating her own ruminations on language, culture, and politics with continuous accounts of "just talk", Stewart propels us into the intensity of this nervous, surreal "space on the side of the road". It is a space that gives us a glimpse into a breach in American society itself, where graveyards of junked cars and piles of other trashed objects endure along with the memories that haunt those who have been left behind by "progress".
Like James Agee's portrayal of the poverty-stricken tenant farmers of the Depression South in "Let
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