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Intro
Preface
Praise for Moveable Designs, Liminal Aesthetics, and Cultural Production in America since 1772
Contents
About the Author
List of Figures
Chapter 1: Introduction: Welcome to the Twilight Zone
Moveable Fictions-Cultural (Dis)Unity and Boundary Transgression
The Designs of Literary and Cultural Practice
Design Thinking and the Cultural Field of 'America'
The Longue Durée of Moveable Designs in American Cultural History
Part I: Theoretical Framework
Chapter 2: Moveable Designs: Liminal Aesthetics and Cultural Production

Designing Hemingway's A Moveable Feast
America as Fiction-Literature as Performance
Liminal Aesthetics and Liquid Modernity
Culture as Design-The (Not So) Secret Lives of Aesthetic Objects
Part II: Contexts
Chapter 3: TransAmerica: Cultural Hybridity and Transgendered Desire from the Colonial Era to Modernity
Introduction: Heterogeneity and Transgendered Desire
The Making of 'America': From the Colonial Era to the Nation State
Revolutionary Compacts: Transgendered Imagery and the Invention of 'Columbia'
Conclusion: From Transnational America to Transnation

Chapter 4: The 'American in Chains': (Cons)Piracy and the Specter of North Africa in U.S. Barbary Captivity Narratives
Introduction: North Africa in the Early U.S. Cultural Imagination
The Specter of Algiers in Barbary Captivity Narratives
Algiers as a Counter-Image to the Early U.S. Republic in The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania
Spaces of Imperialism in Slaves in Algiers and The Algerine Captive
Conclusion: U.S. Exceptionalism and the Birth of the Orient as America's Other

Chapter 5: Open Doors, Closed Spaces: The Transatlantic Imaginary in American Urban Writing from the Post-Revolutionary Era to Modernism
Introduction: Toward an Aesthetics of Cross-Atlantic Mapmaking
From Open City to Shrinking City
The Labyrinthine Aesthetics of the Walking City
Open Doors and Walled Streets: Atlantic Cities as Imagined Landscapes
Conclusion: Shades of the Open City in U.S. Transatlantic Writing
Part III: Case Studies
Chapter 6: White Bo(d)y in Wonderland: Cultural Alterity and Sexual Desire in Tod Browning's Where East Is East (1929)

Introduction: Essentialist Topographies-Where East Is East, and West Is West
The Codes of Colonial Discourse
Economies of Stereotyping
Metonymic Displacement and Ethnic Masquerade
Metaphysical Condensation and Animal Imagery
Fetishization of the Orient
Allegories of (De-)Historicization
Comic Ethnicity and Explosive Body Language
Conclusion: The Uses and Abuses of Orientalist Imagery
Chapter 7: Cinematic Literature: Intermedial Aesthetics, Juvenile Rebellion, and Carnal Subjectivity in J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye

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