Flyover Fictions

Polarization in U.S.-American Culture, Media, and Politics

Sascha Pöhlmann editor Cornelia Klecker editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Nebraska Press

Published:1st Apr '25

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Flyover Fictions cover

Flyover Fictions critically engages the history and contemporary use of the “flyover country” trope in American culture and repurposes the concept as an abstract tool for cultural studies. The term “flyover” arose in the 1970s with variations-“flyover country,” “flyover states”-mainly used as synonyms for the American Midwest in intranational banter regarding cultural differences from the dominant urban centers of New York City and Los Angeles. In recent years, the trope has shifted away from this playfulness and its traditional geographic reference points to indicate larger political and cultural developments that speak of a deepening polarization in the United States.

Flyover Fictions is an exploration of the trope’s current politicization, historical contexts, and general proliferation of meanings. Instead of resolving the ambiguities inherent in the concept, the volume considers what can be done with these ambiguities, and how precisely their fuzziness might be used to create an analytic tool to describe, understand, and critique processes of cultural hierarchization. The contributors show how flyover fictions may operate in different national contexts and also internationally or transnationally, not only providing a fresh perspective on historical and contemporary American culture but also supplying a conceptual toolbox for broader use.
 

Flyover Fictions contributes to its field with its warning: ‘Coastals’ insulting ‘Flyovers’ (or vice versa) have practically become the muzzle flashes that Yank versus Johnny Reb and that Yankee versus Tory once were. An eclectic discussion, the volume’s scholarship is cutting-edge. Flyover Fictions should serve advanced undergraduate students, graduate students, and specialized readers.”-Russell Burrows, author of Reading Wallace Stegner’s “Angle of Repose” “The recent politicization of the term ‘flyover’ is one of the reasons the subject is particularly important at the moment. The balancing act between an examination of flyover country as a place connected at least tangentially to a particular geography and an exploration of flyover country as a broader concept with multiple applications is well done. This is a well-thought-out collection that reads as a cohesive whole.”-Michael K. Johnson, author of Speculative Wests: Popular Representations of a Region and Genre

ISBN: 9781496238993

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

354 pages