Language:
English
繁體中文
Help
回圖書館首頁
手機版館藏查詢
Login
Back
Switch To:
Labeled
|
MARC Mode
|
ISBD
Hotel Publics: Space, Hospitality, a...
~
Tirapelle, Grace Alyce.
Linked to FindBook
Google Book
Amazon
博客來
Hotel Publics: Space, Hospitality, and U.S. Literature, 1893-2010.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Hotel Publics: Space, Hospitality, and U.S. Literature, 1893-2010./
Author:
Tirapelle, Grace Alyce.
Description:
273 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 75-10(E), Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International75-10A(E).
Subject:
American literature. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3627227
ISBN:
9781321023671
Hotel Publics: Space, Hospitality, and U.S. Literature, 1893-2010.
Tirapelle, Grace Alyce.
Hotel Publics: Space, Hospitality, and U.S. Literature, 1893-2010.
- 273 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 75-10(E), Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Davis, 2013.
This study constructs a history of hotels in literature of the long twentieth century, tracking the developments from the luxury hotel as a product of capital accumulation in the late nineteenth century to the abstraction of hotel spaces as financial instruments in the circulation of global capital at the end of the twentieth. Taking space as its theoretical category of analysis, the project analyzes how the commercial, social, and political functions of the hotel both reflect and construct ideas about hospitality and public domesticity. By representing the hotel as a site in which capitalist flows produce mixtures, discord, and productive and affective affiliations among bodies, literature raises a set of questions about forms of public domesticity: the hotel commercializes the sphere of intimate relations and leaves home spaces more accessible to the reaches of moral surveillance and state power even as the 'hotel' assumes and constructs a particular organization and disciplinary structure for the control of bodies and literary genres, and delimits the bounds of normative and transgressive social behaviors. By tracing the shifting function of what I call 'hotel publics' in United States literature from 1893 to 2010, I argue that the hotel functions as a metonym for various conceptions of US space---luxury, work, domestic, and capitalist---at scales ranging from the body to the globe.
ISBN: 9781321023671Subjects--Topical Terms:
523234
American literature.
Hotel Publics: Space, Hospitality, and U.S. Literature, 1893-2010.
LDR
:04005nmm a2200301 4500
001
2064542
005
20151115152142.5
008
170521s2013 eng d
020
$a
9781321023671
035
$a
(MiAaPQ)AAI3627227
035
$a
AAI3627227
040
$a
MiAaPQ
$c
MiAaPQ
100
1
$a
Tirapelle, Grace Alyce.
$3
3179146
245
1 0
$a
Hotel Publics: Space, Hospitality, and U.S. Literature, 1893-2010.
300
$a
273 p.
500
$a
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 75-10(E), Section: A.
500
$a
Adviser: Hsuan L. Hsu.
502
$a
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Davis, 2013.
520
$a
This study constructs a history of hotels in literature of the long twentieth century, tracking the developments from the luxury hotel as a product of capital accumulation in the late nineteenth century to the abstraction of hotel spaces as financial instruments in the circulation of global capital at the end of the twentieth. Taking space as its theoretical category of analysis, the project analyzes how the commercial, social, and political functions of the hotel both reflect and construct ideas about hospitality and public domesticity. By representing the hotel as a site in which capitalist flows produce mixtures, discord, and productive and affective affiliations among bodies, literature raises a set of questions about forms of public domesticity: the hotel commercializes the sphere of intimate relations and leaves home spaces more accessible to the reaches of moral surveillance and state power even as the 'hotel' assumes and constructs a particular organization and disciplinary structure for the control of bodies and literary genres, and delimits the bounds of normative and transgressive social behaviors. By tracing the shifting function of what I call 'hotel publics' in United States literature from 1893 to 2010, I argue that the hotel functions as a metonym for various conceptions of US space---luxury, work, domestic, and capitalist---at scales ranging from the body to the globe.
520
$a
Chapter 1 examines representations of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel as a Gilded Age luxury space. I argue that texts including Henry James' The American Scene and Langston Hughes' "Come to the Waldorf Astoria" produce critiques of the ways that classed behaviors were unevenly inscribed in the hotel's labyrinthine space. In Chapter 2, I focus on the repurposing of run-down luxury hotels as working spaces and urban homes in Depression-era Los Angeles. I examine the hotel in proletarian fictions as an access point for the middle-class writer and his subject and as a contact zone that reveals the changing racial landscape of interwar Los Angeles. Chapters 3 and 4 focus on different ways in which the financialization of capital affected hotel domesticity. Chapter 3 examines postwar literature by John Irving, Vladimir Nabokov, and John Irving that depicts hotels as domestic spaces in which subjects escaped and challenged Cold War domestic and foreign policies of containment associated with the suburban home. The processes of domestication in these spaces defied the moral surveillance enacted by the Holiday Inn, the first standardized motel chain. Chapter 4 reveals, however, the uneven ability of bodies to escape forms of social control. I focus on representations of the struggle to save San Francisco's International Hotel from 1968-1977, placing the focus on Karen Tei Yamashita's 2010 novel, I Hotel, which I argue shows how the city of San Francisco depicted as economic progress -- for the expansion of San Francisco's financial district into a West Coast Wall Street -- the ethical injustice of denying low-income housing to elderly members of its Asian American population.
590
$a
School code: 0029.
650
4
$a
American literature.
$3
523234
650
4
$a
History.
$3
516518
650
4
$a
Literature.
$3
537498
690
$a
0591
690
$a
0578
690
$a
0401
710
2 0
$a
University of California, Davis.
$b
English.
$3
1681470
773
0
$t
Dissertation Abstracts International
$g
75-10A(E).
790
$a
0029
791
$a
Ph.D.
792
$a
2013
793
$a
English
856
4 0
$u
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3627227
based on 0 review(s)
Location:
ALL
電子資源
Year:
Volume Number:
Items
1 records • Pages 1 •
1
Inventory Number
Location Name
Item Class
Material type
Call number
Usage Class
Loan Status
No. of reservations
Opac note
Attachments
W9297200
電子資源
11.線上閱覽_V
電子書
EB
一般使用(Normal)
On shelf
0
1 records • Pages 1 •
1
Multimedia
Reviews
Add a review
and share your thoughts with other readers
Export
pickup library
Processing
...
Change password
Login