The Age of Promiscuity: Narrative and Mythological Meme Mutations in Contemporary Cinema and Popular Culture

Author:   Doru Pop
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9781498580601


Pages:   446
Publication Date:   15 November 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Age of Promiscuity: Narrative and Mythological Meme Mutations in Contemporary Cinema and Popular Culture


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Overview

"This book presents an original and engaging look at contemporary popular culture, opening with the provocative idea that this is a day and age of complete exhaustion of ideas, images, stories, and myths. Questioning the effects of content recycling in cinema and other media, the author further elaborates on the repurposing of cultural junk, the reassembling of narratives and myths. The thought-provoking hypothesis proposed in this research is that we have entered an age of cultural promiscuity. By analyzing the mutations of myth-making practices and connecting them with larger cultural manifestations, the author explains these transformations as integral to the development of a myth-illogical imagination. Cinematic and mythological representations in mainstream Hollywood films have reached a point of amalgamation with no return, which marks the beginning of a ""fourth age of representations,"" where signs and meanings are manifested in illogical permutations. This is more explicit in films that commingle aliens, cowboys, undead American presidents, and zombie nazis, joining together in the same narrative ghosts, werewolves, and vampires, aggregating disjoined storylines and historical fake facts, all coalesced in an orgy of empty burlesque and infantile masquerades. This interdisciplinary research combines cultural studies, film criticism, art and myth interpretations, bringing into the debate multiple concepts from related fields such as critical theory and media criticism. The book also opens up to innovative approaches from a wide array of academic disciplines, offering researchers, students and those fascinated by the transformations happening in contemporary cinema an interpretative tool based on a revised dialectic approach. The conclusion is that we are now victims of a zombie semiotics. Meaning-making in contemporary culture, politics, and aesthetics is dominated by a process of incessant desecration of significations, specific to the total mishmash of representations analyzed here."

Full Product Details

Author:   Doru Pop
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.830kg
ISBN:  

9781498580601


ISBN 10:   1498580602
Pages:   446
Publication Date:   15 November 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Part I: Mythologies Amalgamated Chapter 1: The Transmutation of Ancient Heroes and the Re-Appropriation of Myths in Contemporary Cinema Chapter 2: From Centauresque to Incongruously Burlesque: Retrofitting and Infantilizing Mythologies Chapter 3: Mythological Meme Mutations: The Puerile Patriarchs of an Infantilized God Part II: Double Dark Mirrors in Cinematic Representations Chapter 4: Avatars, Surrogate Identities and Post-Human Transformations Chapter 5: Spare-Parts Heroes, Recycled Narratives, Reused Visualities and other Recuperated Histories Chapter 6: Modern Monsters, Parasitical Stories and Narrative Viruses Chapter 7: Desecration of Cinematic Bodies and Zombie Semiotics Excursus or A Final Walk into the Desert of Significations

Reviews

From Hercules to Zombie Jim, from 50 Shades of Grey to 50 Sheds of Grey, from Game of Thrones to after-sex selfies, this book is a vertiginous guide to the current state of mythology. Pop argues that the apparently endlessly irrational recombinations of myth in contemporary culture go beyond the usual models of hybridization or appropriation. This is an encyclopedic amusement-park ride of a book. By the time it comes to its zombie-littered end you will have an entirely new vocabulary to ponder the endgame culture in which we are all swimming: you'll understand the hodge-podge imagination, cultural pimping, ugly silliness, the demise of forgetting, reasonable nonsense, superficial heroes, spectator perversity, the mingled imaginary, retroactive interpenetration, monstrous repurposing, and of course the wonderful zombie transfer of meaning. -- James Elkins, School of the Art Institute of Chicago


From Hercules to Zombie Jim, from 50 Shades of Grey to 50 Sheds of Grey, from Game of Thrones to after-sex selfies, this book is a vertiginous guide to the current state of mythology. Pop argues that the apparently endlessly irrational recombinations of myth in contemporary culture go beyond the usual models of hybridization or appropriation. This is an encyclopedic amusement-park ride of a book. By the time it comes to its zombie-littered end you will have an entirely new vocabulary to ponder the endgame culture in which we are all swimming: you'll understand the hodge-podge imagination, cultural pimping, ugly silliness, the demise of forgetting, reasonable nonsense, superficial heroes, spectator perversity, the mingled imaginary, retroactive interpenetration, monstrous repurposing, and of course the wonderful zombie transfer of meaning. -- James Elkins, School of the Art Institute of Chicago Doru Pop's The Age of Promiscuity casts an erudite yet pessimistic look at the philosophical, cultural, and political roots of the unprecedented crisis of contemporary Western myth-making. Like his fellow Eastern Europeans Slavoj Zizek and Zygmunt Bauman, Pop's ardent analysis - sustained by excellent knowledge of popular culture and cinema - traces these roots to the corrupted heritage of the Age of Reason, which he argues has morphed into a barrage of significantly insignificant contents, meant to quench our insatiable needs of instant gratification. -- Christina Stojanova, University of Regina, Canada


Author Information

Doru Pop is professor of film and media studies at Babeș-Bolyai University.

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