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Ray Bradbury and the poetics of reverie : fantasy, science fiction, and the reader
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ISBN: 0835715698 9780835715690 Year: 1984 Publisher: Ann Arbor, Mich. UMI Research Press

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Revision of thesis - University of Massachusets, 1981.


Book
Ray Bradbury
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ISBN: 9780252080586 9780252038945 9780252096907 0252096908 0252038940 0252080580 9781322869865 1322869863 Year: 2015 Volume: *2 Publisher: Urbana Chicago [etc.] University of Illinois Press

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As much as any individual, Ray Bradbury brought science fiction's ideas into the mainstream. Yet he transcended the genre in both form and popularity, using its trappings to explore timely social concerns and the kaleidoscope of human experience while in the process becoming one of America's most beloved authors. David Seed follows Bradbury's long career from the early short story masterpieces through his work in a wide variety of broadcast and film genres to the influential cultural commentary he spread via essays, speeches, and interviews.


Book
Ray Bradbury unbound
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ISBN: 9780252038693 9780252096631 0252096630 1322089906 9781322089904 025203869X 0252085620 Year: 2014 Publisher: Urbana Chicago Springfield University of Illinois Press

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Book
The teacher's companion : a resource guide for teachers, by teachers.
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1429110228 0787706310 Year: 1990 Publisher: Dayton, Ohio : Milliken Publishing Company,


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A novel marketplace : mass culture, the book trade and postwar American fiction
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ISBN: 0812242076 0812201442 1283889935 9780812242072 Year: 2010 Publisher: Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press

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As television transformed American culture in the 1950's, critics feared the influence of this newly pervasive mass medium on the nation's literature. While many studies have addressed the rhetorical response of artists and intellectuals to mid-twentieth-century mass culture, the relationship between the emergence of this culture and the production of novels has gone largely unexamined. In A Novel Marketplace, Evan Brier illuminates the complex ties between postwar mass culture and the making, marketing, and reception of American fiction. Between 1948, when television began its ascendancy, and 1959, when Random House became a publicly owned corporation, the way American novels were produced and distributed changed considerably. Analyzing a range of mid-century novels-including Paul Bowles's The Sheltering Sky, Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, Sloan Wilson's The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, and Grace Metalious's Peyton Place-Brier reveals the specific strategies used to carve out cultural and economic space for the American novel just as it seemed most under threat. During this anxious historical moment, the book business underwent an improbable expansion, by capitalizing on an economic boom and a rising population of educated consumers and by forming institutional alliances with educators and cold warriors to promote reading as both a cultural and political good. A Novel Marketplace tells how the book trade and the novelists themselves successfully positioned their works as embattled holdouts against an oppressive mass culture, even as publishers formed partnerships with mass-culture institutions that foreshadowed the multimedia mergers to come in the 1960's. As a foil for and a partner to literary institutions, mass media corporations assisted in fostering the novel's development as both culture and commodity.

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