Reading the Boss: Interdisciplinary Approaches to the
Works of Bruce Springsteen, edited by Roxanne Harde and
Irwin Streight, draws together close readings of Bruce
Springsteen's lyrics by scholars across a range of
academic disciplines. The editors first make a
compelling comparison between Bruce Springsteen and
William Shakespeare, carefully building the argument
that both men offer profound insight into the hungry
human heart. Springsteen, they argue, uses many
Shakespearean themes such as the ties of blood and
friendship, commitment to country and community, the
monsters of lust and jealousy, vanity and power, and the
hopeful pursuit of real love. These themes lift his
music beyond stories of characters casing the Promised
Land of America to universal matters of the heart's
truth wherever it is found. Then, the twelve chapters of
Reading the Boss, written by established and emerging
scholars, engage readers both critically and
enthusiastically with central issues in Bruce
Springsteen's writing, as they read his explorations of
gender, place, religion, philosophy, and other literary
texts, notably the works of Walker Percy and Flannery
O'Connor.Driven by arguments grounded in a wide variety
of theoretical and critical positions, these essays
offer a comprehensive and accessible discussion of
Springsteen's oeuvre, from Greetings From Asbury Park,
N.J. to Working on a Dream that will appeal to both
specialist readers and Springsteen fans alike. |
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