Home > Shoeless Joe Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Myth Building and Cultural Politics in W. P. Kinsella' s Shoeless Joe

Shoeless Joe | Myth Building and Cultural Politics in W. P. Kinsella' s Shoeless Joe

In the following essay, Bryan K. Garman looks at the mythic structure of Kinsella's Shoeless Joe.

The mythic vision of America and its national pastime which W. P. Kinsella constructed in Shoeless Joe ([1982] 1991) has extended into millions of American imaginations, both in the form of the novel and its film adaptation, Field of Dreams (1989). Kinsella built the myth, and people came to live it. Perhaps literary critic Neil Randall best articulates the popular response to Shoeless Joe when he calls it a "moral book" which "makes us come away in the end feeling 'pretty damn good about being alive for the rest of the day.'" But when we read beyond what...

[The entire page is 7169 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:

Summary and Analysis – Themes – Characters – And much more...