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How to Revise a True War Story: Tim O'Brien's Process of Textual Production: New American Canon

Autor John K. Young
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 ian 2017
“You can tell a true war story if you just keep on telling it,” Tim O’Brien writes in The Things They Carried. Widely regarded as the most important novelist to come out of the American war in Viet Nam, O’Brien has kept on telling true war stories not only in narratives that cycle through multiple fictional and non-fictional versions of the war’s defining experiences, but also by rewriting those stories again and again. Key moments of revision extend from early drafts, to the initial appearance of selected chapters in magazines, across typescripts and page proofs for first editions, and through continuing post-publication variants in reprints.

How to Revise a True War Story is the first book-length study of O’Brien’s archival papers at the University of Texas’s Harry Ransom Center. Drawing on extensive study of drafts and other prepublication materials, as well as the multiple published versions of O’Brien’s works, John K. Young tells the untold stories behind the production of such key texts as Going After Cacciato, The Things They Carried, and In the Lake of the Woods. By reading not just the texts that have been published, but also the versions they could have been, Young demonstrates the important choices O’Brien and his editors have made about how to represent the traumas of the war in Viet Nam. The result is a series of texts that refuse to settle into a finished or stable form, just as the stories they present insist on being told and retold in new and changing ways. In their lack of textual stability, these variants across different versions enact for O’Brien’s readers the kinds of narrative volatility that is key to the American literature emerging from the war in Viet Nam. Perhaps in this case, you can tell a true war story if you just keep on revising it.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781609384678
ISBN-10: 1609384679
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 7 figures, 2 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Iowa Press
Colecția University Of Iowa Press
Seria New American Canon


Recenzii

“The quality of John Young’s scholarship is uniformly high. This book does fully what a new book is supposed to do: to supply original knowledge. It is well-grounded in current theories of textual criticism, and in practice the textual analysis, frequently involving major revisions in well-known and much written about titles, is meticulous.”—Philip D. Beidler, author, Late Thoughts on an Old War: The Legacy of Vietnam

“John Young’s new study of the multiple versions of Tim O’Brien’s work(s) is an indispensable book-length study of the author and a path-breaking work of textual scholarship and narratology that significantly revises our understanding of authorship and of what constitutes a ‘work’ of literature.”—Mark Heberle, author, A Trauma Artist: Tim O’Brien and the Fiction of Vietnam

Notă biografică

John K. Young is a professor of English at Marshall University. He is the author of Black Writers, White Publishers: Marketplace Politics in Twentieth-Century African American Literature and, with George Hutchinson, the coeditor of Publishing Blackness: Textual Constructions of Race since 1850. He lives with his family in Lexington, Kentucky.

Descriere

How to Revise a True War Story is the first book-length study of O’Brien’s archival papers at the University of Texas’s Harry Ransom Center. Drawing on extensive study of drafts and other prepublication materials, as well as the multiple published versions of O’Brien’s works, John K. Young tells the untold stories behind the production of such key texts as Going After Cacciato, The Things They Carried, and In the Lake of the Woods. By reading not just the texts that have been published, but also the versions they could have been, Young demonstrates the important choices O’Brien and his editors have made about how to represent the traumas of the war in Viet Nam. The result is a series of texts that refuse to settle into a finished or stable form, just as the stories they present insist on being told and retold in new and changing ways. In their lack of textual stability, these variants across different versions enact for O’Brien’s readers the kinds of narrative volatility that is key to the American literature emerging from the war in Viet Nam. Perhaps in this case, you can tell a true war story if you just keep on revising it.