000 01509cam a2200217 4500500
005 20250121120339.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aDelanoë-Brun, Emmanuelle
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aCinema and Reality: Imaginary America in Walker Percy's The Moviegoer
260 _c2004.
500 _a34
520 _aWalker Percy's first novel, The Moviegoer, concentrates round a narrator whose attraction to the screen results from a sense of an ever elusive American reality. The representation of an idealized reality on screen offers a comforting—albeit somewhat clownish—refuge against the existential anguish voiced by the narrator, to the point that it becomes the narrator's privileged mode of perceiving and conceiving reality, engaging the novel in a hyperbolic inflation of representation, imaginary as much as verbal. This paper considers how in the novel the reality of America and self becomes identified with the mediation of their representation, precipitating the reader into a fiction paying sarcastic homage to the fictitious, somewhere between the pain of depletion and the pleasure of sheer entertainment.
690 _amediation
690 _acinema
690 _aW. Percy
690 _arepresentation
690 _aThe South
786 0 _nRevue française d’études américaines | o 102 | 4 | 2004-12-01 | p. 102-116 | 0397-7870
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-francaise-d-etudes-americaines-2004-4-page-102?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c551277
_d551277