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Informationen zum Autor Joseph Litvak is Professor of English at Tufts University. He is the author of Strange Gourmets: Sophistication, Theory, and the Novel, also published by Duke University Press, and Caught in the Act: Theatricality in the Nineteenth-Century English Novel. Klappentext In a bold rethinking of the Hollywood blacklist and McCarthyite America, Joseph Litvak reveals a political regime that did not end with the 1950s or even with the Cold War: a regime of compulsory sycophancy, in which the good citizen is an informer, ready to denounce anyone who will not play the part of the earnest, patriotic American. While many scholars have noted the anti-Semitism underlying the House Un-American Activities Committee’s (HUAC’s) anti-Communism, Litvak draws on the work of Theodor W. Adorno, Hannah Arendt, Alain Badiou, and Max Horkheimer to show how the committee conflated Jewishness with what he calls “comic cosmopolitanism,” an intolerably seductive happiness, centered in Hollywood and New York, in show business and intellectual circles. He maintains that HUAC took the comic irreverence of the “uncooperative” witnesses as a crime against an American identity based on self-repudiation and the willingness to “name names.” Litvak proposes that sycophancy was (and continues to be) the price exacted for assimilation into mainstream American culture, not just for Jews, but also for homosexuals, immigrants, and other groups deemed threatening to American rectitude. Litvak traces the outlines of comic cosmopolitanism in a series of performances in film and theater and before HUAC, performances by Jewish artists and intellectuals such as Zero Mostel, Judy Holliday, and Abraham Polonsky. At the same time, through an uncompromising analysis of work by informers including Jerome Robbins, Elia Kazan, and Budd Schulberg, he explains the triumph of a stoolpigeon culture that still thrives in the America of the early twenty-first century. Zusammenfassung In a rethinking of the Hollywood blacklist and McCarthyite America! this book reveals a political regime that did not end with the 1950s or even with the Cold War: a regime of compulsory sycophancy! in which the good citizen is an informer! ready to denounce anyone who will not play the part of the earnest! patriotic American. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgments ix 1. Sycoanalysis: An Introduction 1 2. Jew Envy 50 3. Petrified Laughter: Jews in Pictures, 1947 72 4. Collaborators: Schulberg, Kazan, and A Face in the the Crowd 105 5. Comicosmopolitanism: Behind Television 153 6. Bringing Down the House: The Blacklist Musical 182 Coda. Cosmopolitan States 223 Notes 229 Bibliography 271 Index 283...