
Michael A. Kaplan, Friendship Fictions: The Rhetoric of Citizenship in the Liberal Imaginary (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2010).
from the publisher:
A criticism often leveled at liberal democratic culture is its  emphasis on the individual over community and private life over civic  participation. However, liberal democratic culture has a more  complicated relationship to notions of citizenship. As Michael Kaplan  shows, citizenship comprises a major theme of popular entertainment,  especially Hollywood film, and often takes the form of friendship  narratives; and this is no accident. Examining the representations of  citizenship-as-friendship in four Hollywood films (The Big Chill, Thelma & Louise, Lost in Translation, and Smoke),  Kaplan argues that critics have misunderstood some of liberal  democracy’s most significant features: its resilience, its capacity for  self-revision, and the cultural resonance of its model of citizenship.
For  Kaplan, friendship—with its dynamic pacts, fluid alliances, and  contingent communities—is one arena in which preconceptions about  individual participation in civic life are contested and complicated.  Friendship serves as a metaphor for citizenship and mirrors the  individual’s participation in civic life. Friendship Fictions  unravels key implications of this metaphor and demonstrates how it can  transform liberal culture into a more just and democratic way of life.

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