The Unspeakable Failures of David Foster Wallace: Language, Identity, and Resistance
Autor Dr Clare Hayes-Bradyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 aug 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501335846
ISBN-10: 1501335847
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 228 x 151 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:NIPPOD
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501335847
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 228 x 151 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:NIPPOD
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Discusses Wallace as philosopher and writer, demonstrating the overlap between his artistic and sociopolitical/philosophical concerns
Notă biografică
Clare Hayes-Brady is Lecturer in American Literature at University College Dublin, Ireland.
Cuprins
1. IntroductionSection A: Wallace and his World2. "I'm a man of my -" Sketching the Incomplete3. "It's just the texture of the world I live in": The Writer and the WorldSection B: The Foundational Ideas4. The Book, the Broom and the Ladder: Grounding Philosophy5. "An act of communication between one human being and another": Writing and the Process ofCommunication6. Narcissism, Alienation and Commun(al)itySection C: Fail Again: Failure as Structure and Theme7. Vocal Instability and Narrative Structure8. "Personally I'm neutral on the menstruation point": Gender, Difference and the Body9. Freedom, Failure and the Heroic Citizen10. ConclusionBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
Offers pertinent readings of the constant interplay of philosophy and literature in Wallace's work.
Hayes-Brady is deft in identifying the recurring concerns which run, sometimes obsessively, throughout [Wallace's] writing ... She moves freely between texts, drawing examples from across his work in the development of a wide-ranging perspective on these key ideas ... Perhaps the book's most significant contribution is found in its final chapter on 'Gender, Difference, and the Body'.
As the field of Wallace Studies matures, it has become a challenging task to outline a framework through which the entire subject of Wallace can be fruitfully viewed; yet, in this publication, Clare Hayes-Brady does just that. . Hayes-Brady establishes a theoretical framework that can be used as a foundational approach for critical work on Wallace, proposing that failure and inexpressibility, in various forms, are the organizing principles of Wallace's work. This framework elegantly accounts for previous trends in Wallace scholarship that have focused on Wallace's preoccupations with connection, sincerity, solipsism, and his relation to postmodernism. . For anyone interested in dwelling on what Wallace's writing does, or negotiating the inexpressible in contemporary literature, this book offers an excellent way of thinking through what it means to fail.
Can the writing of David Foster Wallace, which has met with such critical and commercial success, best be described in terms of failure? Clare Hayes-Brady answers a provocative 'yes' to this question, tracing how acts of frustrated communication in Wallace's fiction generate an endless need to try and fail again. The book also draws attention to Wallace's less productive failures with regard to gender, race, and the body. These provocations make The Unspeakable Failures of David Foster Wallace a welcome contribution to a vibrant critical debate.
One of the most productive readings of David Foster Wallace and his use of language that exists in the secondary literature to date. Hayes-Brady's study offers an incisive analysis of several complex and weighty Wallacean themes, handling them with deftness and intellectual rigor. It is coherently organized, tightly theorized, lucidly written, and challenging, yet enjoyable, to read. ... Wallace fans and students of literature, philosophy, and theory alike will definitely want this collection in their library, and will no doubt refer to it time and again as a foundational text and inspiration for further research. ... The Unspeakable Failures of David Foster Wallace is an excellent work of scholarship, in which Clare Hayes-Brady has shown a masterful command of both primary and secondary Wallace literature as well as the varied and often difficult philosophical waters in which he swims. With this offering Hayes-Brady skillfully and creatively reinforces her already substantial contributions to Wallace studies - in its well-informed and penetrating deconstruction of Wallace's failures, this book amounts to a splendid success.
Hayes-Brady is deft in identifying the recurring concerns which run, sometimes obsessively, throughout [Wallace's] writing ... She moves freely between texts, drawing examples from across his work in the development of a wide-ranging perspective on these key ideas ... Perhaps the book's most significant contribution is found in its final chapter on 'Gender, Difference, and the Body'.
As the field of Wallace Studies matures, it has become a challenging task to outline a framework through which the entire subject of Wallace can be fruitfully viewed; yet, in this publication, Clare Hayes-Brady does just that. . Hayes-Brady establishes a theoretical framework that can be used as a foundational approach for critical work on Wallace, proposing that failure and inexpressibility, in various forms, are the organizing principles of Wallace's work. This framework elegantly accounts for previous trends in Wallace scholarship that have focused on Wallace's preoccupations with connection, sincerity, solipsism, and his relation to postmodernism. . For anyone interested in dwelling on what Wallace's writing does, or negotiating the inexpressible in contemporary literature, this book offers an excellent way of thinking through what it means to fail.
Can the writing of David Foster Wallace, which has met with such critical and commercial success, best be described in terms of failure? Clare Hayes-Brady answers a provocative 'yes' to this question, tracing how acts of frustrated communication in Wallace's fiction generate an endless need to try and fail again. The book also draws attention to Wallace's less productive failures with regard to gender, race, and the body. These provocations make The Unspeakable Failures of David Foster Wallace a welcome contribution to a vibrant critical debate.
One of the most productive readings of David Foster Wallace and his use of language that exists in the secondary literature to date. Hayes-Brady's study offers an incisive analysis of several complex and weighty Wallacean themes, handling them with deftness and intellectual rigor. It is coherently organized, tightly theorized, lucidly written, and challenging, yet enjoyable, to read. ... Wallace fans and students of literature, philosophy, and theory alike will definitely want this collection in their library, and will no doubt refer to it time and again as a foundational text and inspiration for further research. ... The Unspeakable Failures of David Foster Wallace is an excellent work of scholarship, in which Clare Hayes-Brady has shown a masterful command of both primary and secondary Wallace literature as well as the varied and often difficult philosophical waters in which he swims. With this offering Hayes-Brady skillfully and creatively reinforces her already substantial contributions to Wallace studies - in its well-informed and penetrating deconstruction of Wallace's failures, this book amounts to a splendid success.