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The American Television Hero as a Novelist of Himself: Language as Topos in Matthew Weiner's Mad Men
by
Amezcua, David
in
Aesthetic Education
/ Aesthetics
/ American literature
/ Cheever, John
/ Cultural history
/ Exceptionalism
/ Fiction
/ Language Role
/ Literary criticism
/ Literary Genres
/ Males
/ Men
/ Mythology
/ Narrative theme
/ Novelists
/ Novels
/ O'Hara, Frank
/ Photography
/ Reference Materials
/ Roth, Philip
/ Scripts
/ Television
/ Television programs
/ Weiner, Matthew
2025
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The American Television Hero as a Novelist of Himself: Language as Topos in Matthew Weiner's Mad Men
by
Amezcua, David
in
Aesthetic Education
/ Aesthetics
/ American literature
/ Cheever, John
/ Cultural history
/ Exceptionalism
/ Fiction
/ Language Role
/ Literary criticism
/ Literary Genres
/ Males
/ Men
/ Mythology
/ Narrative theme
/ Novelists
/ Novels
/ O'Hara, Frank
/ Photography
/ Reference Materials
/ Roth, Philip
/ Scripts
/ Television
/ Television programs
/ Weiner, Matthew
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
The American Television Hero as a Novelist of Himself: Language as Topos in Matthew Weiner's Mad Men
by
Amezcua, David
in
Aesthetic Education
/ Aesthetics
/ American literature
/ Cheever, John
/ Cultural history
/ Exceptionalism
/ Fiction
/ Language Role
/ Literary criticism
/ Literary Genres
/ Males
/ Men
/ Mythology
/ Narrative theme
/ Novelists
/ Novels
/ O'Hara, Frank
/ Photography
/ Reference Materials
/ Roth, Philip
/ Scripts
/ Television
/ Television programs
/ Weiner, Matthew
2025
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The American Television Hero as a Novelist of Himself: Language as Topos in Matthew Weiner's Mad Men
Journal Article
The American Television Hero as a Novelist of Himself: Language as Topos in Matthew Weiner's Mad Men
2025
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Overview
This article tackles the manifestations of American literary themes in Matthew Weiner's Mad Men. I contend that the transmedial alignment of TV series and literature heightens our understanding of fundamental myths of American exceptionalism. This paper studies the role of language at script level as a site or topos where the protagonist's constant reinvention occurs. Moreover, it provides an interdiscursive analysis of Frank O'Hara's \"Mayakovsky\" and John Cheever's \"The Swimmer\" to show their thematic connection, which is the transition from old to new life. This theme possesses an axiomatic role in the genesis of this show, suggesting a tight intermedial relationship between the show's scripts and the two literary works I will analyze. On the basi s of my analysis, I suggest that reading this TV series as literature is possible if we consider both the show's thematic connection with American literary themes and its multiple literary references.
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