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List of contents
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Time-Saving Appliances & the American Century: A Case for the Significance of a Literary Trope
1. “Everything in the Icebox”: Domestic Energies in Jack Kerouac and Beat Culture, 1950–76
2. “The Lamentation of a Vacuum Cleaner”: Appliance Disappointments in John Cheever & Richard Yates, 1947–81
3. “‘I’m a Toaster with a Cunt’”: Time-Saving Appliances & Errant Women in Marge Piercy’s Early Fiction
4. “I’ve Never Been Able to Get Another Girl as Efficient or as Reliable”: Time-Saving Appliances in Black American Fiction, 1952–2003
5. “Ever Think About Being Attacked by a … Vacuum Cleaner”: Time-Saving Appliances in Sci-Fi, 1950-1978
6. “The Angel of Death Pushes a Vacuum Cleaner”: Retrospective Appliances in Kurt Vonnegut & Don DeLillo, 1950–97
7. “You Can Overdo Remembering Stuff”: Anti-Nostalgic Appliances in Postmillennial Fiction
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the author
Rachele Dini is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at University of Roehampton, UK. She is author of Consumerism, Waste, and Re-use in Twentieth-century Fiction: Legacies of the Avant-Garde (2016) and founder of WasteInLit: The International Literary Waste Studies Network (literarywaste.com). Her research lies at the intersection of 20th-century literary studies, material culture studies, eco-criticism,
and American studies.
Summary
Winner of the 2023 Emily Toth Award for Best Single Work in Women’s Studies
“All-Electric” Narratives is the first in-depth study of time-saving electrical appliances in American literature. It examines the literary depiction of refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, oven ranges, washing machines, dryers, dishwashers, toasters, blenders, standing and hand-held mixers, and microwave ovens between 1945, when the “all-electric” home came to be associated with the nation’s hard-won victory, and 2020, as contemporary writers consider the enduring material and spiritual effects of these objects in the 21st century.
The appropriation and subversion of the rhetoric of domestic electrification and time-saving comprises a crucial, but overlooked, element in 20th-century literary forms and genres including Beat literature, Black American literature, second-wave feminist fiction, science fiction, and postmodernist fiction. Through close-readings of dozens of literary texts alongside print and television ads from this period, Dini shows how U.S. writers have unearthed the paradoxes inherent to claims of appliances’ capacity to “give back” time to their user, transport them into a technologically-progressive future, or “return” them to some pastoral past. In so doing, she reveals literary appliances’ role in raising questions about gender norms and sexuality, racial exclusion and erasure, class anxieties, the ramifications of mechanization, the perils and possibilities of conformity, the limitations of patriotism, and the inevitable fallacy of utopian thinking—while both shaping and radically disrupting the literary forms in which they operated.
Foreword
The first study of the representation of domestic time-saving electrical appliances in 20th-century American literature.
Additional text
“All-Electric” Narratives crackles with the energy of big ideas and astute observation. With a detective’s eye and a cultural historian’s range, Rachele Dini illuminates the central role that modern appliances and domestic electrification have in U.S. fiction from 1945 to today. It is fitting that in a book about electric currents and connectivity, Dini moves deftly between print ads and literary genres, between consumer history, new materialist theory, and literary criticism. This is a must-read for anyone interested in American fiction, but also for readers curious about toasters, blenders, microwaves, and the many gadgets that have long shaped the American home. Through its expansive investigation of efficient devices, "All-Electric" Narratives rethinks the very nature of time-saving; it is a book to linger over.