Description
With this incisive work, Palmer Rampell reveals the surprising role genre fiction played in redefining the category of the private person in the postwar period. Especially after the Supreme Court established a constitutional right to privacy in 1965, legal scholars, judges, and the public scrambled to understand the scope of that right. Before and after the Court's ruling, authors of genre fiction and film reformulated their aliens, androids, and monsters to engage in debates about personal privacy as it pertained to issues like abortion, police surveillance, and euthanasia.
Triangulating novels and films with original archival discoveries and historical and legal research, Rampell provides new readings of Patricia Highsmith, Dorothy B. Hughes, Philip K. Dick, Octavia Butler, Chester Himes, Stephen King, Cormac McCarthy, and others. The book pairs the right of privacy for heterosexual sex with queer and proto-feminist crime fiction; racialized police surveillance at midcentury with Black crime fiction; Roe v. Wade (1973) with 1960s and 1970s science fiction; the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (1974) with horror; and the right to die with westerns. While we are accustomed to defenses of fiction for its capacity to represent fully rendered private life, Rampell suggests that we might value a certain strand of genre fiction for its capacity to theorize the meaning of the protean concept of privacy.
Author: Palmer Rampell
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Published: 06/21/2022
Pages: 240
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 5.91h x 8.82w x 0.63d
ISBN13: 9781503631892
ISBN10: 1503631893
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | American | General
- History | Social History
- Law | Legal History
About the Author
Palmer Rampell received his Ph.D. in English from Yale University. His writing has appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Public Books, and the Washington Post.