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Interviews | June 19, 2009

Dave: IMG Jim Lynch Makes Landscape Art... Out of Text



jimlynchIf Carl Hiaasen set one of his novels on a residential stretch of boundary line between British Columbia and Washington, or if Richard Russo's characters had relatives in the Pacific Northwest, the result might be something like Jim Lynch's Border Songs. Continue »
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    Border Songs

    Jim Lynch

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1 Local Warehouse Crime- Mobs and Organized Crime


An Offer We Can't Refuse: The Mafia in the Mind of America

by George Destefano

An Offer We Can't Refuse: The Mafia in the Mind of America Cover

ISBN13: 9780571211579
ISBN10: 0571211577
Condition: Standard
Dustjacket: Standard
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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

A provocative and entertaining look at the mafia, the media, and the (un)making of Italian Americans.

As evidenced in countless films, novels, and television portrayals, the Mafia has maintained an enduring hold on the American cultural imagination--even as it continues to wrongly color our real-life perception of Italian Americans. In An Offer We Can't Refuse, George De Stefano takes a close look at the origins and prevalence of the Mafia mythos in America. Beginning with a consideration of Italian emigration in the early twentieth century and the fear and prejudice--among both Americans and Italians--that informed our earliest conception of what was at the time the largest immigrant group to enter the United States, De Stefano explores how these impressions laid the groundwork for the images so familiar to us today and uses them to illuminate and explore the variety and allure of Mafia stories--from Coppola's romanticized paeans to Scorsese's bloody realism to the bourgeois world of David Chase's Sopranos--while discussing the cultural richness often contained in these works. At the same time, he addresses the lingering power of the goodfella cliché and the lamentable extent to which it is embedded in our consciousness, making it all but impossible to green-light a project about the Italian American experience not set in gangland.

Review:

"Journalist De Stefano takes a careful look at the appeal of the Mafia in popular culture: how the image of the Italian gangster developed and how it affects Italian-Americans. He traces the evolution of the gangster in film, from the 'roguishly charming' Irish gangster (James Cagney in Public Enemy) to the sinister Italian who replaced him (Paul Muni in Scarface). Southern Italian immigrants, who came to the U.S. in unprecedented waves, were seen as 'unassimilable... irreducibly foreign' (according to an 1883 New York Times editorial), and De Stefano presents their history and the history of the Mafia, debunking some commonly held ideas, especially the myth that the Mafia is rooted in a centuries-old Sicilian tradition. De Stefano meticulously documents books, TV and films, especially the Godfather series, the work of Martin Scorsese and The Sopranos. He cites Italian-American writers and academics on how the perception of Italians as mobsters affects the community and contributes his own responses. And despite his conclusion that the Mafia 'is now the paradigmatic pop culture expression of Italian-American ethnicity,' De Stefano allows that Italians have succeeded in mainstream America. The book lacks a narrative arc, but the author has done a fine job with a complex and provocative subject." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Synopsis:

The author takes a close look at the origins and prevalence of the Mafia mythos in America, exploring how these impressions laid the groundwork for the images so familiar today.

About the Author

George De Stefano is a journalist and critic who has written extensively on

culture for numerous publications, including The Nation, Film Comment, and Newsday.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780571211579
Subtitle:
The Mafia in the Mind of America
Author:
Destefano, George
Author:
de Stefano, George
Publisher:
Faber & Faber
Subject:
General
Subject:
Mafia
Subject:
Popular Culture
Subject:
Italian americans
Subject:
Organized crime
Subject:
Ethnic Studies - General
Subject:
Popular Culture - General
Publication Date:
20060110
Binding:
HC
Language:
English
Illustrations:
Y
Pages:
448
Dimensions:
9.20x6.46x1.43 in. 1.71 lbs.

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