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Political Philosophy Comes to Rick's: Casablanca and American Civic Culture

Contributor(s): Bagchi, Nivedita (Contribution by), Cantor, Paul a (Contribution by), Craig, Leon Harold (Contribution by), Luca, Kenneth de (Contribution by), Hattox, Ralph (Contribution by), Lawler, Peter Augustine (Contribution by), Nichols, David K (Contribution by), Nichols, Mary P (Contribution by), Palmer, Michael (Contribution by), Peterson, Paul (Contribution by), Pontuso, James F (Contribution by), Pontuso, James F (Editor)

ISBN: 9780739111130

Publisher: Lexington Books

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Pub Date: July 25, 2005

Dewey: 791.4372

LCCN: 2005011738

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Index, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.64" H x 9.06" L x 6.06" W ( 0.74 lbs) 208 pages

Series: Applications of Political Theory (Paperback)

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Political Philosophy Comes to Rick's focuses on reading one of the world's most watched films, Casablanca, politically. Contributors contend that the popularity of the film lies in its ability to present American civic culture, the American character, if you will, in a thought...

Review Quotes:

"Without doubt, Casablanca is one of the greatest American films ever made; part of its enduring appeal, the essays in this volume reveal, lies in its ability to reflect the timeless ideas which permeate popular culture. James Pontuso has assembled an eclectic group of essays, exploring the film's moment in history, its place in the careers of Michael Curtiz and Humphrey Bogart, and - most importantly, perhaps - its lessons about the American character and about the relationship between individual happiness and moral or political obligation." --Christine Henderson, Liberty Fund, Inc.

". . . an imaginative text that treats cinema in a manner befitting its status, namely, as the new literary genre." --Perspectives on Politics

"We tend to forget that the past is often a selective past, fashioned mostly by persons who are of a different time and place, and often according to the fancies of the historian. Such forgetfulness is not evident in James Pontuso's wonderful collection ofessays on one of the landmarks of film, Casablanca. The authors judiciously balance their concern for the enduring political and philosophic questions that emerge throughout the film and a deft understanding of the changes in artistic media and historical context through which those questions are shaped. Political Philosophy Comes to Rick's is a rare form of cultural criticism that works astutely within film medium. The philosophic and political claims are not forced or tortured. We are invited to listen, think, see, and feel.." --Eduardo A. Velasquez, Washington and Lee University

"We tend to forget that the past is often a selective past, fashioned mostly by persons who are of a different time and place, and often according to the fancies of the historian. Such forgetfulness is not evident in James Pontuso's wonderful collection of essays on one of the landmarks of film, Casablanca. The authors judiciously balance their concern for the enduring political and philosophic questions that emerge throughout the film and a deft understanding of the changes in artistic media and historical context through which those questions are shaped. Political Philosophy Comes to Rick's is a rare form of cultural criticism that works astutely within film medium. The philosophic and political claims are not forced or tortured. We are invited to listen, think, see, and feel." --Eduardo A. Velasquez, Washington and Lee University

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