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Dilvo I. Ristoff

    Updike's America
    John Updike's Rabbit at rest
    • John Updike's Rabbit at Rest: Appropriating History is a new historicist reading of Updike's last Rabbit novel. It follows the day-to-day chronology of events, in the novel and in the media, showing how history, with its variety and polyphonic immediacy, is appropriated by the characters, with what criteria, through which tropes, and to what ideological purpose. Although the emphasis of the text falls on Updike's appropriation of American history in the 1980's as it manifests itself in Rabbit at Rest, significant references are also made to the other Rabbit novels. These novels show how the history of the earlier decades is made into a motive for the characters' thoughts, feelings, and actions.

      John Updike's Rabbit at rest
    • Updike's America is a study of the Rabbit trilogy from a culturally-oriented perspective. Ristoff demonstrates how Updike uses the polyphony of the American scene to generate moods, conflicts, and action, and how the appropriation of national history by the various characters of the trilogy reveals the ideological spectrum of America in the fifties, sixties, and seventies.

      Updike's America