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Fake Identity?: The Impostor Narrative in North American Culture

Contributor(s): Rosenthal, Caroline (Editor), Schäfer, Stefanie (Editor)

ISBN: 9783593501017

Publisher: Campus Verlag

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Pub Date: August 15, 2014

Dewey: 302.54

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Price on Product, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.60" H x 8.30" L x 5.80" W ( 0.65 lbs) 236 pages

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Description: In North America, imposture narratives of all kinds from ethnic impersonation to confidence games abound because the socio-cultural history and national mythologies of the US and Canada are an especially fertile ground for the invention of identities, whether fake or "real." When discovered, imposture incites fascination and scandal--yet it also showcases how identities are made. Fake identities thus are a negative lens through which the performance of selves become obvious. The essays in this book examine both real and fictional imposture with a special interest in identity performance and in the cultural value attributed to authenticity in Western culture. The North American impostor narrative helps contextualise and historicize how selves are made, from the narrator of colonial travelogues to postmodernist author/narrator voices, from the urban con game to trickster shamanism."

Brief description: Caroline Rosenthal is professor of North American literature at Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Germany. She is the author, most recently, of New York and Toronto Novels After Postmodernism: Explorations of the Urban.

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