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The Prettiest Woman: The Patient Is on Life Support but Is Not Yet Dead

The Prettiest Woman
The Patient Is on Life Support but Is Not Yet Dead
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Half Title Page
  3. Series List
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. Dedication
  7. Contents
  8. Like Clockwork: “Bring the Jobs Back to America”
  9. She’s a Pretty Woman
  10. Nostalgia
  11. A Hollywood Genealogy
  12. Cold Calling Is a Mug’s Game
  13. Wall Street
  14. You Are the Suit You Wear
  15. Raymond Williams: A Brief Word
  16. The Patient Is on Life Support but Is Not Yet Dead
  17. The Baseness of/in the Superstructure
  18. Working Women
  19. Late Industrial Capitalism 1: “Making Things in America”
  20. Late Industrial Capitalism 2: Nostalgia and Grievance
  21. On Morality: A Brief Žižekian Word
  22. It’s Big in Japan
  23. The Boro Aesthetic
  24. Bastard 1
  25. A New Economy of the Prostitute and Its Dangers
  26. My Fair Lady, Beverly Hills Style
  27. All a Pretty Prostitute Needs Is Her Own Dr. Henry Higgins
  28. The Upside of Not Knowing Which Fork to Use
  29. Who’s Driving Edward Lewis?
  30. Bastard 2: The Hostility of the Takeover
  31. Oedipal Drama, Pretty Woman Style
  32. Making and Unmaking in the Oedipal Family Drama
  33. To Make Something
  34. Father’s Son, Mother’s Son: The Enduring Phantasmatic Father
  35. The Žižekian Ethics of Mick Jagger
  36. “It Must Be Very Difficult to Let Go of Something So Beautiful”
  37. To Steal, to Make of Steel
  38. Acknowledgments
  39. Series List Continued (2 of 2)
  40. Author Biography

The Patient Is on Life Support but Is Not Yet Dead

Gordon Gekko is a street fighter, an alleyway financial brawler in an expensive suit. Pretty Woman presents James Morse as an old-schooled, buttoned-down, but tough-as-nails industrial capitalist. If Bud Fox is no match for Gekko, then what James and David Morse find in Edward is a PEF who is, if not possessed of a conscience lately come by exactly, then a postindustrial capitalist who, at the very last second, it seems, decides to check on the ever-weakening pulse of industrial capitalism.

The verdict is peremptory but not inconsequential. American late industrial capitalism is on life support. Every now and then—and it does not matter if we’re talking about the early 1990s or the third decade of the twenty-first century—the patient blinks. Or the patient, ailing and almost beyond economic recognition, reaches out a feeble hand, just enough to suggest that it still has a pulse. The occasional call for the revitalization of the American manufacturing industry is that speaking, with a regularity that should not surprise us but nonetheless always does, of an economic nationalism that can always be brought to life. Especially in those moments when the United States fears that its global dominance is under threat.

It is, of course, in precisely those moments when the racism and xenophobia that are so constitutive of this economic nationalism are mobilized, sometimes subtly, sometimes less so (as in the current battle for global dominance with China). Economic nostalgia is always embedded within the American political.

The PEF’s decision to keep building ships submits, as befits the movie’s romantic thematic, to a strain of nostalgia. As such, the desire to resuscitate late industrial capitalism operates as a secondary discourse in Pretty Woman. The determination to “make something in America” (to “make things in America again”) is the story that suffuses the movie’s main plot—the redemption of the wanton, destructive venture capitalism by the prostitute. It might even be more appropriate to say that Pretty Woman functions in a redemptive Christological register in that it stands as the desire for the resurrection of industrial capitalism, against all hard economic evidence that declares this mode of capitalism dead; or at the very least, that industrial capitalism has for decades been surpassed as the dominant capitalist mode of producing—reproducing—wealth. (Industrial capitalism will not, some three decades after its heyday, unlike Jesus the Christ, rise again on the third day.)

However, thinking late/industrial capitalism’s deep attachment to its outmoded modality, which also serves as a shorthand for its motto, “Make things in America, again,” resonates in a distinctly different timbre in a post-2016 America. The 1990 economic nationalism of Pretty Woman, in which were always incubating the seeds of a white nationalism potentially virulent in its xenophobia, in which could always be detected the strains of a white racism angry at the (largely) meager economic gains made by black Americans and other minorities, can be said to have come fully into itself since 2016.

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The Baseness of/in the Superstructure
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Excerpts from “Street Life,” words and music by Will Jennings and Joe Sample, copyright 1979 Irving Music, Inc. and BMG Rights Management (UK) Ltd.; all rights for BMG Rights Management (UK) Ltd. administered by BMG Rights Management (US) LLC.; all rights reserved; used by permission; reprinted by permission of Hal Leonard LLC.

The Prettiest Woman: Nostalgia for Late Industrial Capitalism by Grant Farred is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
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