Northern Illinois University's English Department has an unusual offering for the spring semester - a course on The James Bond Phenomenon.
Christoph Lindner, an assistant professor of film and literature who will be the teacher, said there are many reasons for offering this course.
"One of the reasons is that the entire James Bond phenomenon has been going on for over 50 years," Lindner said. "It started off as a literary phenomenon and then became a film phenomenon and now it's also expanded to the other forms of mass media ... it is a hugely successful mass media phenomenon."
The course will take a kind of feminist approach to the examination of the Bond phenomenon, looking into the racism, sexism and class snobbery of the character.
In honor of Professor Lindner's initiative, we're offering a book for today's giveaway that ought to find a place on his syllabus - James Bond and Philosophy. It's part of Open Court's "Popular Culture and Philosophy" series, and features such entertaining essays as "James Bond and Q: Heidegger's Technology or 'You're Not a Sportsman, Mr. Bond' " and " ' That Fatal Kiss': Bond, Ethics and the Objectification of Women."
The first winner to email us with the subject line "NOW PAY ATTENTION, 007" wins the book. Previous winners ineligible and, as always, please include your complete mailing address.
The end of Friday's Post ... but TEV will return in Monday's Post.
UPDATE: Congratulations to Jonathan Butters of Chicago.
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Let me take a stab at the Bond phenom. I just picked up Stepen Kinzer's book OVERTHROW, about our 20th century addiction to overthrowing legal regimes in other countries, headed by the likes of Smedley Butler and Kermit Roosevelt, droll and crass individuals who were fronts for their mendacious handlers back in Washington, or Wall Street. So if we zing around the world playing the third world like it were some big pachinko game, we want a more dashing figure to be at the center of these (fictional) maelstroms, perhaps someone with a British accent, who doesn't have to go to the whore house, or resort to rape to get his action on. There you have it. James Bond, a projection for our 20-21st century interventionist addiction.
A sidebar. Bill Maher wonders why the youth of America flock to see movies like SAW, which are explicity about torture. Same vicarious James Bond thrill. We are out torturing people and this is the only way they get to watch, short of a ticket to Iraq/Abu Ghraib. Blame Dick Cheney, Bill, not the kids, they just want ot know what is going on.
Posted by: Kurt Zumdieck | October 28, 2006 at 09:33 AM