ABSTRACT

The Promise of Nostalgia analyses a range of texts – including The Virgin Suicides, both the novel by Jeffrey Eugenides’ and Sofia Coppola’s screen adaptation, photography of Detroit’s ‘abandoned spaces’, and blogger Tavi Gevinson's media output – to explore nostalgia as a prominent affect in contemporary American cultural production.

Counter to the prevalent caricature of nostalgia as anti-future, the book proposes a more nuanced reading of its stakes and meanings. Instead of understanding it as evidence of the absence of utopia it contends that there is a masked utopian impulse in this nostalgia ‘mode’ and critical potential in what has typically been dismissed as ideological.

This book will be of interest to scholars, graduate students and upper-level undergraduate students interested in contemporary culture, cultural theory, media studies, the Frankfurt School, utopian studies and American literature and culture.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part I|1 pages

chapter 1|23 pages

Nostalgia

Is it really not what it used to be?

chapter 2|20 pages

Memory, nostalgia, utopia and time

chapter 3|28 pages

Nostalgia as ‘gold-bearing rubble’

part II|1 pages

chapter |3 pages

Interlude 1

The hole in the whole: utopia contra instrumental reason

chapter |3 pages

Interlude 2

A space outside: utopia as negation

chapter 5|28 pages

Memories of longing in The Virgin Suicides

chapter |3 pages

Interlude 3

Marshalling the past: utopia versus once upon a time

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion