Hawthorn, Ruth (2018) Delinquent dogs and the Molise malaise: negotiating suburbia in John Fante’s “My Dog Stupid”. Journal of American Studies, 52 (3). pp. 766-786. ISSN 0021-8758
Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021875817000408
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Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
This article explores ideas of suburban masculinity in “My Dog Stupid” (1986), a comic novella by the critically neglected novelist and screenwriter John Fante. Placing the text within the context of the twentieth-century suburban “canon,” I argue that Fante complicates and critiques the dystopian image of American suburbia that has dominated both fictional and sociological representations of this environment over the past seventy years.
Keywords: | Suburbia, American Literature, John Fante |
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Subjects: | T Eastern, Asiatic, African, American and Australasian Languages, Literature and related subjects > T730 American Society and Culture studies T Eastern, Asiatic, African, American and Australasian Languages, Literature and related subjects > T700 American studies T Eastern, Asiatic, African, American and Australasian Languages, Literature and related subjects > T720 American Literature studies |
Divisions: | College of Arts > School of English & Journalism > School of English & Journalism (English) |
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ID Code: | 28718 |
Deposited On: | 11 Sep 2017 13:19 |
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