
编辑推荐From Publishers WeeklyRather than add to the canon of morbid Monroe speculation, Times Literary Supplement contributor Churchwell steps back to examine the examiners and ask: why has so much been written about Monroe, and what does this fixation say about our society? She doesn't provide any answers, but focuses instead on the phenomenon—she's fascinated by the investigation itself. Although Churchwell touches briefly on the few factual areas where biographers and conspiracy theorists agree, such as Monroe's marriages and film stats, she chooses to linger on the numerous crux points for commentators. Even something as mundane as how Monroe developed her characteristic hip-swinging strut has been hotly debated: the head of the star's former modeling agency maintains it was because of weak ankles, but an acting coach claims he invented it, and a gossip columnist insists Monroe shaved off part of one high heel so her walk would be uneven. Instead of trying to find the truth, Churchwell ponders why such seemingly minor aspects of Monroe's image draw such fervid attention in a culture already saturated with image, celebrity and sex. Churchwell culls a wealth of information about Monroe, providing insight on our celebrity culture, with a refreshingly detached perspective. 13 b&w photos. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. From Booklist Why add to the gargantuan Marilyn Monroe archives? Because that very assemblage of materials, many of them dubious enough to inspire Churchwell to call the lot of it an apocrypha, is exactly what her exhaustive yet searing analysis calls attention to. The "many lives" in her title refers to the Monroe icons created by Norman Mailer, Joyce Carol Oates, and Monroe's third husband, Arthur Miller, not to mention dozens of biographers, including Gloria Steinem. Wielding the precision tools of literary criticism, the interrogative skills of a prosecutor, and laser-sharp insights, Churchwell reveals just how permeated the discourse about Monroe is with misogyny, moralizing, speculation, eroticism, resentment, and fear. Mythologized as both innocent and whore, Monroe is seen as a tragic victim of her beauty and a wretched childhood instead of as a remarkably successful artist who possessed an unparalleled rapport with the camera, "comic genius," and true moxie. Churchwell's bold deconstruction of the Monroe myth (which includes theories about the unsolved mystery of her death) ultimately reveals the thin line between adoration and contempt. Donna Seaman Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved--This text refers to the Hardcover edition. |
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