The Godfather and American Culture: How the Corleones Became "Our Gang"
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
A comprehensive look at this classic work of popular fiction and its hold on the American imagination.
From the Back Cover
Mario Puzo's The Godfather is an American pop phenomenon whose driving force is reflected not only in book sales and cable television movie marathons but also in such related works as the hit television series The Sopranos. In The Godfather and American Culture, Chris Messenger offers an important and comprehensive study of this classic work of popular fiction and its hold on the American imagination. As Messenger shows, the Corleones have indeed become our gang, and we see our family business in America reflected in them. Examining The Godfather and its many incarnations within a variety of texts and contexts, Messenger also addresses Puzo's inconsistent affiliation with his Italian heritage, his denial of the multiethnic literary subject, and his decades-long struggle for respect as a writer in contemporary America. The study ultimately offers a way of looking at the much-maligned genre of popular or bestselling fiction itself. By placing both the novel and films within a number of revealing critical situations, Messenger addresses the continuing problem of how we talk about elite and popular fiction in America-and what we mean when we take sides.
The Godfather and American Culture: How the Corleones Became "Our Gang",Christian K. Messenger,State University of New York Press,0791453588,1920-,American - General,Corleone family (Fictitious ch,Corleone family (Fictitious characters),Criminals in literature,Film & Video - History & Criticism,Godfather,Italian Americans in literatur,Italian Americans in literature,Literary Criticism,Literature - Classics / Criticism,Literature: Classics,Popular Culture - General,Puzo, Mario - Prose & Criticism,Puzo, Mario,
The Godfather and American Culture: How the Corleones Became "Our Gang"
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