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Year's Work in Lebowski Studies [Mīkstie vāki]

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A massive underground sensation, The Big Lebowski has been hailed as the first cult film of the internet age. In this book, 21 fans and scholars address the film's influences -- westerns, noir, grail legends, the 1960s, and Fluxus -- and its historical connections to the first Iraq war, boomers, slackerdom, surrealism, college culture, and of course bowling. The Year's Work in Lebowski Studies contains neither arid analyses nor lectures for the late-night crowd, but new ways of thinking and writing about film culture.

Recenzijas

More than a few of this book's essay titles will make you groan and laugh out loud at the same time. . . . But just as often, the writing here is a bit like the film: amiable, laid-back and possessed of a wobbly Zen-acuity.December 30, 2009

(New York Times) If you're a 'Big Lebowski' collector . . . you may want to acquire this . . . illuminating book.December 31, 2009

(Washington Post) Any self-respecting fan will want a copy for the living-room table.December 2009

(Indianapolis Monthly) Fantastic . . . not just a book to be passed around among film studies majors. It manages to be deeply smart and serious about its ideas without become stuffy and impenetrable. It's also not one of those hokey knock-off, cash-in books that you see trying to jump on the coattails. If you're holiday shopping, this should definitely make the cut.11/11/2009

(http://condalmo.wordpress.com/2009/11/11/dude-i-know/) Dudely interesting. . . . Comentale and Jaffe have mixed up a provocative, truly strange cocktail of cultural studies and cultural theory.

- Simon Critchley This book is the Dude's joint. The Year's Work in Lebowski Studies proves that academics can be very funny and even sometimes smart.

- Percival Everett The essays are complex, evocative, approachable, and attentive to the film's ironies and nuances. There is something here for the slacker as well as the scholar, for all Lebowskis, big and small, for film specialists, 90s fanatics, scholars of American studies, and the ever-growing assemblage of Lebowski cultists worldwide.

- Patrick O'Donnell (Michigan State University) What could be more ridiculous than the application of Marxist, feminist, and other Very Serious theories to the orgy of goofiness that constitutes the Coen brothers' film? But the thing is, after reading the book's 21 essays, you can't help yourself. You find yourself thinking, Dude, it really is all in there: the updated Western, the Arthurian romance (think pee-stained rug as Holy Grail), the homage to Raymond Chandler, the critique of petro-capitalism, the riff on Rip Van Winkle (bowling, duh!).March/April 2010

(Indiana Alumni Magazine) The Year's Work in Lebowski Studies is like a roller coaster ride. And, like the amusement park for children, there are no disappointments. Each one of the essays in the collection is original, unexpected in content and elegant in writing, skilled in the difficult art of intertextual references, intriguing conclusions and always theoretically founded....the authors of this enthusiastic, passionate and rigorous book question Lebowski with the same care with which we read the works of the most representative of contemporary intellectualsJanuary 6, 2010

- Sara Antonelli (L'Unitą [ translation])

Papildus informācija

Commended for IndieFab awards (Popular Culture) 2009.Pioneering studies of the Coen brothers' cult classic
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(38)
Edward P. Comentale
Aaron Jaffe
PART ONE: INS (INTRINSIC MODELS AND INFLUENCES)
39(214)
The Really Big Sleep: Jeffrey Lebowski as the Second Coming of Rip Van Winkle
41(17)
Fred Ashe
A Once and Future Dude: The Big Lebowski as Medieval Grail-Quest
58(16)
Andrew Rabin
Dudespeak: Or, How to Bowl like a Pornstar
74(24)
Justus Nieland
Metonymic Hats and Metaphoric Tumbleweeds: Noir Literary Aesthetics in Miller's Crossing and The Big Lebowski
98(26)
Christopher Raczkowski
The Dude and the New Left
124(25)
Stacy Thompson
The Big Lebowski and Paul de Man: Historicizing Irony and Ironizing Historicism
149(24)
Joshua Kates
Lebowski and the Ends of Postmodern American Comedy
173(16)
Matthew Biberman
Found Document: The Stranger's Commentary and a Note on His Method
189(14)
Thomas B. Byers
No Literal Connection: Mass Commodification, U.S. Militarism, and the Oil Industry in The Big Lebowski
203(25)
David Martin-Jones
``I'll Keep Rolling Along'': Some Notes on Singing Cowboys and Bowling Alleys in The Big Lebowski
228(25)
Edward P. Comentale
PART TWO: OUTS (ECCENTRIC ACTIVITIES AND BEHAVIORS)
253(212)
What Condition the Postmodern Condition Is In: Collecting Culture in The Big Lebowski
255(21)
Allan Smithee
Holding Out Hope for the Creedence: Music and the Search for the Real Thing in The Big Lebowski
276(19)
Diane Pecknold
``Fuck It, Let's Go Bowling'': The Cultural Connotations of Bowling in The Big Lebowski
295(26)
Bradley D. Clissold
LebowskIcons: The Rug, The Iron Lung, The Tiki Bar, and Busby Berkeley
321(20)
Dennis Hall
Susan Grove Hall
On the White Russian
341(12)
Craig N. Owens
Professor Dude: An Inquiry into the Appeal of His Dudeness for Contemporary College Students
353(12)
Richard Gaughran
Abiding (as) Animal: Marmot, Pomeranian, Whale, Dude
365(21)
David Pagano
Logjammin' and Gutterballs: Masculinities in The Big Lebowski
386(24)
Dennis Allen
Size Matters
410(17)
Judith Roof
Brunswick = Fluxus
427(18)
Aaron Jaffe
Enduring and Abiding
445(11)
Jonathan Elmer
Endnote: The Goofy and the Profound: A Non-Academic's Perspective on the Lebowski Achievement
456(9)
William Preston Robertson
Works Cited 465(18)
List of Contributors 483(4)
Index 487
Edward P. Comentale is Associate Professor of English at Indiana University Bloomington. He is author of Modernism, Cultural Production, and the British Avant-Garde and editor (with Stephen Watt and Skip Willman) of Ian Fleming and James Bond (IUP, 2005) and (with Andrzej Gasiorek) of T.E. Hulme and the Question of Modernism.

Aaron Jaffe is Associate Professor of English at the University of Louisville. He is author of Modernism and the Culture of Celebrity.