Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>

<p>Despite almost a hundred years of separation, both Cecil B. DeMille’s film <em>The Cheat</em> (1915) and John Updike’s novel <em>Terrorist</em> (2006) deploy a clear-cut territorial divide between Western and Eastern spaces in...

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Main Author: Bradley M. Freeman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2011-12-01
Series:Journal of Transnational American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://submit.escholarship.org/ojs/index.php/acgcc_jtas/article/view/7092
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author Bradley M. Freeman
author_facet Bradley M. Freeman
author_sort Bradley M. Freeman
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description <p>Despite almost a hundred years of separation, both Cecil B. DeMille’s film <em>The Cheat</em> (1915) and John Updike’s novel <em>Terrorist</em> (2006) deploy a clear-cut territorial divide between Western and Eastern spaces in order to envision a unified American space. These narratives superimpose a “natural” division on these historically opposed spaces and thereby suggest that any contact between these spaces will have dangerous consequences. These consequences include the potential dissolution and eventual destruction of American productivity, surveillance, and territorial integrity. DeMille’s film and Updike’s novel represent America as a nation-state that must be protected from the East. In 1915, <em>The Cheat</em> warned against an interracial America and the upsurge in immigration that characterized the turn of the century. Nearly a century later, <em>Terrorist</em> presupposes an interracial America but still constructs an East that threatens the security of America. While registering the particular concerns of two distinct historical moments, these narratives represent a larger attempt in American aesthetics to imagine an East that jeopardizes the utopian possibilities of an overly idealized American space.</p>
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spelling doaj.art-215ad27c9b1f42e182fd03e774b98ffa2022-12-22T01:27:47ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaJournal of Transnational American Studies1940-07642011-12-0132Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>Bradley M. Freeman<p>Despite almost a hundred years of separation, both Cecil B. DeMille’s film <em>The Cheat</em> (1915) and John Updike’s novel <em>Terrorist</em> (2006) deploy a clear-cut territorial divide between Western and Eastern spaces in order to envision a unified American space. These narratives superimpose a “natural” division on these historically opposed spaces and thereby suggest that any contact between these spaces will have dangerous consequences. These consequences include the potential dissolution and eventual destruction of American productivity, surveillance, and territorial integrity. DeMille’s film and Updike’s novel represent America as a nation-state that must be protected from the East. In 1915, <em>The Cheat</em> warned against an interracial America and the upsurge in immigration that characterized the turn of the century. Nearly a century later, <em>Terrorist</em> presupposes an interracial America but still constructs an East that threatens the security of America. While registering the particular concerns of two distinct historical moments, these narratives represent a larger attempt in American aesthetics to imagine an East that jeopardizes the utopian possibilities of an overly idealized American space.</p>https://submit.escholarship.org/ojs/index.php/acgcc_jtas/article/view/7092SpaceEastCecil B. DeMilleJohn Updike
spellingShingle Bradley M. Freeman
Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>
Journal of Transnational American Studies
Space
East
Cecil B. DeMille
John Updike
title Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>
title_full Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>
title_fullStr Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>
title_full_unstemmed Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>
title_short Threatening “the Good Order”: West Meets East in Cecil B. DeMille’s <em>The Cheat</em> and John Updike’s <em>Terrorist</em>
title_sort threatening the good order west meets east in cecil b demille s lt em gt the cheat lt em gt and john updike s lt em gt terrorist lt em gt
topic Space
East
Cecil B. DeMille
John Updike
url https://submit.escholarship.org/ojs/index.php/acgcc_jtas/article/view/7092
work_keys_str_mv AT bradleymfreeman threateningthegoodorderwestmeetseastincecilbdemillesltemgtthecheatltemgtandjohnupdikesltemgtterroristltemgt