“In his new book, William V. Spanos continues his imaginative assault upon the legacy of American exceptionalism. He reads Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court contrapuntally, as equally a celebration and a send-up of America’s myth of being the paradise of the latter days. Shock and Awe is an instant classic of rethinking the transnational turn in New American Studies and, more generally, represents the renewal of literary study in our benighted age.” —Daniel T. O’Hara, professor of English and Inaugural Mellon Term Professor of Humanities at Temple University, and author of Narrating Demons, Transformative Texts: Rereading Genius in Mid-Century Modern Fictional Memoir
“This is ostensibly a book about a single novel by Mark Twain. But it is much more than that. The impressive theoretical investigation of “shock and awe” tactics presented here is far-reaching. Spanos argues with great lucidity that this politico-military ontology, seemingly a recent phenomenon, not only extends across the most important sites of cultural and political production currently impacting our historical occasion, but also, and perhaps more importantly, has its origins in the earliest foundations of America. Spanos’s reading of A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court expands our frames of understanding and creatively engages, through an exemplary and ethical literary analysis, the most important of concerns—from the expansion of America in the nineteenth century, to the development of the institution of American studies and the new Transnational American Studies, to the theories of the “state of exception” as articulated by Agamben.” —Robert P. Marzec, Purdue University