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Hard Hats, Rednecks, and Macho Men: Class in 1970s American Cinema



This essay discusses how white working-class men are often portrayed in 1970s American cinema as violent and threatening. The author argues that this portrayal is actually a way for middle-class Americans to deal with the anxieties caused by the decade's many changes. more details
Key Features:
  • The author discusses how white working-class men are often portrayed in 1970s American cinema as violent and threatening.
  • The author argues that this portrayal is actually a way for middle-class Americans to deal with the anxieties caused by the decade's many changes.


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Features
Author Derek Nystrom
Format Softcover
ISBN 9780195336771
Publication Date 16/10/2009
Publisher USA Oxford University Press
Manufacturer Oxford Univ Pr
Description
This essay discusses how white working-class men are often portrayed in 1970s American cinema as violent and threatening. The author argues that this portrayal is actually a way for middle-class Americans to deal with the anxieties caused by the decade's many changes.

Everywhere you look in 1970s American cinema, you find white working-class men. They bring a violent conclusion to Easy Rider, murdering the film's representatives of countercultural alienation and disaffection. They lurk in the Georgia woods of Deliverance, attacking outsiders in a manner that evokes the South's recent history of racial violence and upheaval. They haunt the singles nightclubs of Looking for Mr. Goodbar, threatening the film's newly liberated heroine with patriarchal violence. They strut through the disco clubs of Saturday Night Fever, dancing to music whose roots in post-Stonewall homosexuality invite ambiguity that the men ignore. Hard Hats, Rednecks, and Macho Men argues that the persistent appearance of working-class characters in these and other films of the 1970s reveals the powerful role class played in the key social and political developments of the decade, such as the decline of the New Left and counterculture, the re-emergence of the South as the Sunbelt, and the rise of the women's and gay liberation movements. Examining the "youth cult" film, the neo-Western "southern," and the "new nightlife" film, Nystrom shows how these cinematic renderings of white working-class masculinity actually tell us more about the crises facing the middle class during the 1970s than about working-class experience itself. Hard Hats thus demonstrates how these representations of the working class serve as fantasies about a class Other-fantasies that offer imaginary resolutions to middle-class anxieties provoked by the decade's upheavals. Drawing on examples of iconic films from the era-Saturday Night Fever, Cruising, Five Easy Pieces, and Walking Tall, among others-Nystrom presents an incisive, evocative study of class and American cinema during one of the nation's most tumultuous decades.
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