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A Treacherous Secret Agent : How Literature Spoke Truth to Power During the Red Scare
A Treacherous Secret Agent : How Literature Spoke Truth to Power During the Red Scare
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Author(s): Garber, Marjorie
ISBN No.: 9780300282825
Pages: 256
Year: 202603
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 42.00
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

"[A] whip-smart study. This densely woven analysis [packs] a punch."-- Publishers Weekly "A new light on dark times. Garber [reminds] us that literary voices still have potent force."-- Kirkus Reviews "In this dazzling, absorbing, entertaining, and erudite book, Marjorie Garber shows once again why she is one of our most insightful and inventive cultural critics. She finds totally unexpected ways of making literature always timely and always dangerous to those who want to shut down artistic expression."--Lynn Hunt, author of History: Why It Matters "No one but Marjorie Garber could produce this amusing and timely book. Garber combs through the records of the investigations, and her unexpected coupling of the House Un-American Activities Committee with Shakespeare reveals a treacherous Shakespeare who effectively mocks the investigators.


"--Jonathan Culler, Cornell University "In this scintillatingly staged confrontation with the Red Scare bullies, it's the old books that have all the best lines. Some are real zingers. Literature gets a well-deserved revenge."--Bruce Robbins, author of Who's Allowed to Protest? "In Marjorie Garber's expert hands, Shakespeare becomes a key to unlock the anxieties of the HUAC era--and maybe our own. A smart, shrewd book."--William Germano, Cooper Union "As artists, writers, and performers come under attack from the forces of authoritarianism, we can take heart from Marjorie Garber's witty and perceptive account of how cultural warriors resisted McCarthyism."--Ellen Schrecker, coeditor of The Right to Learn: Resisting the Right-Wing Attack on Academic Freedom "With the U.S.


regressing to McCarthyism (or worse), Garber makes a bracing case for literature as a treacherous secret agent, taking 'poetic revenge' on the scoundrels who, as she shows, are right to fear it."--Joseph Litvak, The Un-Americans: Jews, the Blacklist, and Stoolpigeon Culture.


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