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Andy Kaufman: Wrestling With The American Dream,Used
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When Andy Kaufman succumbed suddenly to lung cancer in 1984, some of his fans believed that his death was yet another elaborate prank. Over the previous decade, Kaufman had achieved improbable fame for his bizarre antiperformanceslipsynching the Mighty Mouse theme song, reading The Great Gatsby aloud in its entirety when people expected comedy, asking audience members to touch a boil on his neckthat perplexed, annoyed, or offended his viewers.In Andy Kaufman, Florian Keller explores Kaufmans career within a broader discussion of the ideology of the American Dream. Taking as his starting point the 1999 biopic Man on the Moon, Keller brilliantly decodes Kaufman in a way that makes it possible to grasp his radical agenda beyond avantgarde theories of transgression. As an entertainer, Kaufman submerged his identity beneath a multiplicity of personas, enacting the American belief that the self can and should be endlessly remade for the sake of happiness and success. He did this so rigorously and consistently, Keller argues, that he exposed the internal contradictions of Americas ideology of selfinvention.Keller posits that Kaufman offered a radically differentand perhaps more potentlogic of cultural criticism than did more overtly political comedians such as Lenny Bruce. Presenting close readings of Kaufmans most significant performances, Keller shows how Kaufman mountedfor the benefit of an often uncomprehending publica sustained and remarkable critique of Americas obsession with celebrity and individualism.Florian Keller is a fellow at the Institute of Cultural Studies, School of Art and Design, University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Zurich.
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