Authors
Giudice, NicoloAffiliation
University of BedfordshireIssue Date
2020-02-12Subjects
American studies
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In his photobook American Night (2003), the photographer Paul Graham evokes the passage of a walker who draws the outline of a composite and dialectic map of the American city. This article will examine how the book's structure and its division into zones is symptomatic of the explosion of the city and of its spatial, social and racial inequalities. These zones are also spaces of invisibility and visibility, of over-/perfect/under-exposure, illuminating the social/ racial contrasts that underpin the urban environment and the mechanisms of their perpetuation. In this sense, American Night ultimately exposes the biopolitical struggle that underscores the American city.Citation
Giudice N (2020) 'Paul Graham's American night and the politics of exposure', Journal of American Studies, 54 (3), pp.492-516.Publisher
Cambridge University PressJournal
Journal of American StudiesType
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
0021-8758EISSN
1469-5154ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0021875819000963