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Born in Flames: Termite Dreams, Dialectical Fairy Tales, and Pop Apocalypses
 
 
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Born in Flames: Termite Dreams, Dialectical Fairy Tales, and Pop Apocalypses [Hardcover]

Howard Hampton (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 15, 2007

Twenty years as an outsider scouring the underbelly of American culture has made Howard Hampton a uniquely hardnosed guide to the heart of pop darkness. Bridging the fatalistic, intensely charged space between Apocalypse Now Redux and Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit,” his writing breaks down barriers of ignorance and arrogance that have segregated art forms from each other and often from the world at large.

In the freewheeling spirit of Pauline Kael, Lester Bangs, and Manny Farber, Hampton calls up the extremist, underground tendencies and archaic forces simmering beneath the surface of popular forms. Ranging from the kinetic poetry of Hong Kong cinema and the neo–New Wave energy of Irma Vep to the punk heroines of Sleater-Kinney and Ghost World, Born in Flames plays odd couples off one another: pitting Natural Born Killers against Forrest Gump, contrasting Jean-Luc Godard with Steven Spielberg, defending David Lynch against aesthetic ideologues, invoking The Curse of the Mekons against Fredric Jameson’s Postmodernism, and introducing D. H. Lawrence to Buffy the Vampire Slayer. “We are born in flames,” sang the incandescent Lora Logic, and here those flames are a source of illumination as well as destruction, warmth as well as consumption.

From the scorched-earth works of action-movie provocateurs Seijun Suzuki and Sam Peckinpah to the cargo cult soundscapes of Pere Ubu and the Czech dissidents Plastic People of the Universe, Born in Flames is a headlong plunge into the passions and disruptive power of art.

(20070204)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

It's fitting to find a tribute to Lester Bangs halfway through this collection of film and music reviews, as Hampton appears to be a qualified successor to Bangs in the realm of pop cultural criticism. In these essays, written for alternative newspapers and art magazines, Hampton charts a freewheeling path through Hong Kong cinema, riot grrl albums and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. That last show is something of a touchstone for Hampton: in one essay, he links it to Nirvana as part of the same cultural moment; in another, he views the series through the prism of D.H. Lawrence. The book is filled with similarly unlikely pairings that wind up making perfect sense, from the connections between Dennis Potter and punk rock to a revelatory description of Meat Loaf as a B-movie version of Bruce Springsteen. And when something offends Hampton's sensibilities, watch out. Pans of Forrest Gump and the "perfumed gunk" of Sting cut with a scathing fury. For the most part, though, Hampton chooses to devote his energies to music and movies he loves—and no matter how eclectic your tastes, there's bound to be at least one artist in this collection he'll make you want to track down. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Essayist and critic Hampton writes, for publications from A to V (Artforum to the Village Voice), about film, television, music, and literature, digging up "the visceral logics connecting these iconic forms." He's an encyclopedic pop-culture jukebox, skipping from track to track faster than a caffeine-addled teen mouse-clicking through cyberspace. He links Forrest Gump to Natural Born Killers as "magnetic poles of America's mania for order" ("American Maniacs") and finds the music of Sting wanting when compared to hillbilly twanger Hasil Adkins ("Bring Me the Head of Gordon Sumner"). The torrent of allusions presupposes an Olympian level of cultural indoctrination, and some sentences are so dense that they require a little thoughtful chewing, but Hampton offers something that grows scarcer as today's media bombardment grows in volume: fresh thinking. Knee-jerk intellectuals may find it easy to lampoon someone who takes pop this seriously, but Hampton is a writer--possibly the only one--who can analyze Buffy the Vampire Slayer in the context of D. H. Lawrence ("American Daemons") and make it work. Keir Graff
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 496 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (January 15, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 067402317X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674023178
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.7 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,133,860 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Screams out against lifelessness and the will to demean..., February 22, 2007
By 
Rob Wilson (Santa Cruz and Honolulu) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Born in Flames: Termite Dreams, Dialectical Fairy Tales, and Pop Apocalypses (Hardcover)
Howard Hampton's "Born In Flames," is so vividly written, each sentence like a crazed aphorism on some bleak American-gothic apocalypse just this side of redemption-via-imagination, a creatural re-imagining beyond the blood darkness, effluvia, and debris of our times and ordinary lives. One could study how to write essays and to organize cultural collections around wild tropes by such a book. Not sure the introduction gets at what the individual essays are doing alone or in the aggregate, but it is a book that calls out for one to come to terms with it, as a way of reading film and music and US culture as such, as crazed intervention, as a will to create and transform the ordinary in style and cultural-extremity production. He can get from moments in Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid to larger shifts in the culture, and from Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia to the blood poetry of some US frontier apocalypse, still to come. That book so wrought is probably more crammed with speculation and implication than whole issues of PMLA in their professionalized repetition of approach and language. That cover screams out against lifelessness and routine modes of writing or being. This is a quest for rebirth, life "born in flames" not death or negation or the will to demean...
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3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Painfully pedantic, February 28, 2009
I am not one to write reviews....and I don't believe I have ever taken the time to write a bad one.

I still can't fathom how a writer could push me toward writing a very negative review but that's how passionately ticked off I feel about this book.

This is a collection of totally random and uncoherent reviews of mish mash pop culture. Now, I enjoy learning about underground or underrated works of art and I appreciate a good critic. I picked up the book hoping that I would discover new things. But here, you can tell the writer enjoys being obscure for the sake of being obscure and relishes in the use of painstaking references. I just couldn't enjoy the read as all I could focus on was not the subject matter but Hampton's arrogance and air pseudo-superiority. This was so painful that I gave up.
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