A collection of the work of some of the best cultural critics writing about the period, American Literature and Culture in an Age of Cold War reveals a broad range of ways that
American cultural production from the late 1940s to the present might be understood in relation to the Cold War. Critically engaging the reigning paradigms that equate postwar U.S. culture
with containment culture, the authors present suggestive revisionist claims. Their essays draw on a literary archive��ncluding the works of John Updike, Joan Didion, Richard E. Kim, Allen
Ginsberg, Edwin Denby, Alice Childress, Frank Herbert, and others��trikingly different from the one typically presented in accounts of the period.��