Synopses & Reviews
Seinfeld as a contemporary adaptation of Etherege's Restoration comedy of manners
The Man of Mode?
Friends as a reworking of Shakespeare's romantic comedy Much Ado About Nothing?
Star Wars as an adaptation of Spenser's epic poem, The Faerie Queene?
The popular culture that surrounds us in our daily lives bears a striking similarity to some of the great works of literature of the past. In television, movies, magazines, and advertisements we are exposed to many of the same stories as those critics who study the great books of Western literature, but we have simply been encouraged to look at those stories differently.
In Trash Culture, Richard K. Simon examines the ways in which the great literature and cultural work of the past has been rewritten for today's consumer society, with supermarket tabloids such as The National Enquirer and celebrity gossip magazines like People serving as contemporary versions of the great dramatic tragedies of the past. Today's advertising repeats the tale of the Golden Age, but inverts the value system of a classic utopia; the shopping mall combines bits and pieces of the great garden styles of Western history, and now adds consumer goods; Playboy magazine revises Castiglione's Renaissance courtesy book, The Book of the Courtier; and Cosmopolitan magazine revises the women's coming-of-age novels of Jane Austen, Gustave Flaubert, and Edith Wharton.
Trash Culture concludes that the great books are alive and well, but simply hidden from the critics. It argues for the linking of high and low for the study and appreciation of each form of literature, and the importance of teaching popular culture alongside books of the great tradition in order to understand the critical context in which the books appear.
Review
"The author makes the interesting and not altogether unconvincing point that works of popular culture are related to the 'great tradition' of high art. The Fairte Queene, for example, is the urtext that stands behind Star Wars, as the author shows, and advertising promises a 'utopia' of goods, he suggests, related to More's Utopia.Simon's suggestive book compels us, however, to contemplate the differences between high art and popular culture, between Madame Bovary and Cosmopolitan, between the beautiful and fashion, between the magic of language and banality, between insight and easy solutions, etc." Reviewed by Andrew Witmer, Virginia Quarterly Review (Copyright 2006 Virginia Quarterly Review)
Synopsis
"[Simon] invites respect for popular works as artistic expressions in themselves at the same time as he uses these expressions as hooks to better understandand appreciatethe 'great' works of the past."Robert J. Thompson, author of
Television's Second Golden Age"Trash Culture is original, provocative, strongly argued and an enjoyable as well as informative read. . . We not only see trash culture anew by reading it from a classical critical perspective, but, more startlingly, we see classical critical perspectives anew in relation to how exactly they apply to trash culture."Tony Hilfer, author of The Crime Novel: A Deviant Genre
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 179-184) and index.
About the Author
Richard K. Simon is Professor of English and Chair of Humanities at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. He is the author of The Labyrinth of the Comic: Theory and Practice from Fielding to Freud (1985).