Fr. 80.00

Cambridge Companion to John F. Kennedy

English · Hardback

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Description

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The Cambridge Companion to John F. Kennedy explores the creation, and afterlife, of an American icon.

List of contents










1. Kennedy, Boston, and Harvard Eoin Cannon; 2. Kennedy and the Catholic Church Paul Giles; 3. The Kennedy¿Nixon debates: the launch of television's transformation of US politics and popular culture Mary Ann Watson; 4. 'Investing in persons': the political culture of Kennedy liberalism Sean McCann; 5. JFK and the civil rights movement Douglas Field; 6. Kennedy, the Cold War, and the national security state Andrew Preston; 7. JFK and modernization theory Amanda McVety; 8. JFK and the global anticolonial movement Vaughn Rasberry; 9. Kennedy and postwar intellectual culture John Hellmann; 10. The Camelot presidency: Kennedy and postwar style Lee Konstantinou; 11. The Kennedy assassination and postmodern paranoia Peter Knight; 12. An eternal flame: the Kennedy assassination, national grief, and national nostalgia J. D. Connor; 13. Free the world and your ass will follow: JFK and revolutionary freedom in sixties youth culture Sally Bachner; 14. The Kennedy family romance Michael Trask; 15. Kennedy and the conservatives Robert Mason; 16. The Kennedy legacy: from hagiography to exposé and back again Loren Glass.

About the author

Andrew Hoberek is Associate Professor of English at the University of Missouri. He is also the author of The Twilight of the Middle Class: Post-World War II American Fiction and White-Collar Work and Considering Watchmen: Poetics, Property, Politics. Hoberek has published in Modern Fiction Studies, Modern Language Quarterly, Studies in American Fiction, American Literary History, and Contemporary Literature. He currently serves as the book review editor for Twentieth-Century Literature.

Summary

Featuring essays by leading literary critics, historians, and film scholars, The Cambridge Companion to John F. Kennedy addresses such topics as Kennedy's youth in Boston, his foreign policy and his role in reshaping the US welfare state, his relationship to the civil rights and conservative movements, and the ongoing reverberations in literature and film.

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