Mickey Mouse

Emblem of the American Spirit

Written By: Garry Apgar
$40.00
Mickey Mouse: Emblem of the American Spirit tells the compelling story of how Walt Disney’s beloved graphic alter ego, the most enduring pop icon ever created, was born, how it soon took on a life of its own, and became an instantly recognizable figure virtually everywhere on earth.

It is an extensive illustrated “biography” and pop culture study of the diminutive cartoon star whose unprecedented success laid the foundation for everything the Walt Disney Company has achieved over the years.

Mickey Mouse: Emblem of the American Spirit chronicles the life and times of Disney’s cheerful signature character, beginning with his lively syncopated debut in 1928 in Steamboat Willie at the tail end of the Jazz Age and into the Depression, and traces his impact on the realms of high art, literature, even politics — in peace and in war — both in the United States and abroad.

With over 300 images — many rarely or never before seen, most in full color —, Mickey Mouse: Emblem of the American Spirit is a worthy companion to Christopher Finch’s classic volume, The Art of Walt Disney. Join Garry Apgar and The Walt Disney Family Foundation Press for a fascinating look at the multiple ways Walt Disney’s iconic Mouse has impacted our lives, individually and as a society.
Format: Hardbound
Publication Date: 12/22/2015
ISBN: 9781616286729
Pages: 336
Trim Size: 9.75 x 7.5 x 1.2

  • About the Author 
  • Press
Garry Apgar, Author: Art historian, cartoonist, and journalist Garry Apgar has taught art history, French literature, and cross-disciplinary topics at Brown University, Princeton University, the University of Delaware and Southern Connecticut State University. He is a co-founder and Secretary-Treasurer of The Voltaire Society of America, co-author of The Newspaper in Art (1996), and editor of A Mickey Mouse Reader (University Press of Mississippi, 2014), an anthology of articles and essays by, among others, Diego Rivera, E. M. Forster, Maurice Sendak, Stephen Jay Gould, John Updike, and Walt Disney himself.

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