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Author - Allan Hepburn ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Hardcover Book item from Yale University Press was reviewed on 18-Oct-2008. Search ISBN:0300104987 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Intrigue: Espionage and Culture Reference Book. Classifications : English Literature Literature Humanities New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General AAS Literature Humanities New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General A . Click the following link to view the cover of Intrigue: Espionage and Culture. Related topics: English Literature. Literature. Humanities. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. General AAS. Literature. Humanities. Custom Stores. requestid: 8b43c726-524d-414d-9e6f-1694ab3bf6c4requestprocessingtime: 0.1776740000000000 salesrank: 743864 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 120930140640 1) Hardcover Book Intrigue: Espionage and Culture by Yale University Press. In "Intrigue: Espionage and Culture," Allen Hepburn explores the connotative range of recurrent narrative motifs in twentieth-century spy fiction. After developing a "theory of intrigue," he focuses his investigations on John Le Carré´s "A Perfect Spy," Graham Greene´s "Third Man," and John Banville´s "The Untouchable," among other novels of espionage. Hepburn´s analysis of Banville´s Victor Maskell, whose character is based in part on art historian and Soviet spy Anthony Blunt, is particularly insightful. One would like to see Professor Hepburn extend his inquiry to the many representations of actual spies such as Kim Philby, Guy Burgess, et al. It would be interesting to see how many of his identified stereotypes recur in espionage accounts that purport to be factual. Such an analysis would serve to enlighten the historian who is trying to distinguish fact from fiction while exploring the so-called "wilderness of mirrors."
2) Hardcover Book Intrigue: Espionage and Culture by Yale University Press. Why do spies have such cachet in the twentieth century? Why do they keep reinventing themselves? What do they mean in a political process? This book examines the tradition of the spy narrative from its inception in the late nineteenth century through the present day. Ranging from John le Carré’s bestsellers to Elizabeth Bowen’s novels, from James Bond to John Banville’s contemporary narratives, Allan Hepburn sets the historical contexts of these fictions: the Cambridge spy ring; the Profumo Affair; the witch-hunts against gay men in the civil service and diplomatic corps in the 1950s. Instead of focusing on the formulaic nature of the genre, Intrigue emphasizes the responsiveness of spy stories to particular historical contingencies. Hepburn begins by offering a systematic theory of the conventions and attractions of espionage fiction and then examines the British and Irish tradition of spy novels. A final section considers the particular form that American spy narratives have taken as they have cross-fertilized with the tradition of American romance in works such as Joan Didion’s Democracy and John Barth’s Sabbatical. Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 15-Nov-2008, 03001049879780300104981, 960-870-280-480-531-701-681-8
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