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The Wallace Effect: David Foster Wallace and the Contemporary Literary Imagination: David Foster Wallace Studies

Autor Marshall Boswell
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 ian 2019
The Wallace Effect explores David Foster Wallace's contested space at the forefront of 21st-century American fiction. Pioneering Wallace scholar Marshall Boswell does this by illuminating "The Wallace Effect"-the aura of literary competition that Wallace routinely summoned in his fiction and non-fiction and that continues to inform the reception of his work by his contemporaries. A frankly combative writer, Wallace openly challenged his artistic predecessors as he sought to establish himself as the leading literary figure of the post-postmodern turn. Boswell challenges this portrait in two ways. First, he examines novels by Wallace's literary patriarchs and contemporaries that introduce innovations on traditional metafiction that Wallace would later claim as his own. Second, he explores four novels published after Wallace's ascendency that attempt to demythologize Wallace's persona and his literary preeminence. By re-situating Wallace's work in a broader and more contentious literary arena, The Wallace Effect traces both the reach and the limits of Wallace's legacy.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781501344909
ISBN-10: 1501344900
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria David Foster Wallace Studies

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

Writers and novels discussed include John Barth's The Tidewater Tales, Richard Powers' Prisoner's Dilemma, Jeffrey Eugenides' The Marriage Plot, Jonathan Franzen's Freedom, as well as writers such as Amy Hungerford and Lauren Groff who have written against Wallace and his influence

Notă biografică

Marshall Boswell is Professor and Chair of English at Rhodes College, USA. He is the author of four books, including Understanding David Foster Wallace (2004) and John Updike's Rabbit Tetralogy: Mastered Irony in Motion (2001), and the editor of three books, including David Foster Wallace and 'The Long Thing' (Bloomsbury, 2014) and A Companion to David Foster Wallace Studies (co-editor, 2013). He served as Guest Editor for a two-part special issue of Studies in the Novel devoted to David Foster Wallace's novels.

Cuprins

Series Editor's ForewordIntroductionToward Wallace1. Something Both and Neither: Marshes, Marriage and the Fertile Invention of John Barth's The Tidewater Tales2. The Awful Way Back to We: Crackpot Realism and Ironic Realism in Richard Powers' Prisoner's DilemmaThe Wallace Effect3. The Rival Lover: David Foster Wallace and the Anxiety of Influence in Jeffrey Eugenides; The Marriage Plot4. The Varieties of Irony: Claire Messud's The Emperor's Children and the Comedy of Redemption5. Competitive Friendship: Love and Reckoning in Jonathan Franzen's Freedom6. Against Wallace: Amy Hungerford, Lauren Groff, and the Resistance to GeniusConclusion: Love & CrueltyAcknowledgementsBibliographyIndex

Recenzii

Boswell's collection of essays plays a significant role in Wallace scholarship. With his intertextual examinations of the novels and stories against the work of his peers, Boswell zeroes in on the depth and breadth of Wallace's vision.
One measure of literary accomplishment is the resistance and resentment that a writer provokes in other writers, and by that measure David Foster Wallace's accomplishment was undeniably major. It takes a scholar of Marshall Boswell's resourcefulness and perspicacity to show us exactly how this is so, as he does in this eye-opening book.
The Wallace Effect is the most extended and fruitful exploration of David Foster Wallace's influence on his literary contemporaries to date. Noting the sea change in American literature that Wallace's writing heralded, Boswell charts the novelistic courses of a number of writers who anxiously beat back against the resulting new current in compelling ways. Boswell demonstrates that whether these writers' works question, negotiate with, or condemn Wallace, what remains undeniable is Wallace's deep and lasting effect on contemporary literature. In The Wallace Effect, Wallace emerges as a formidable author who inspires writers and readers alike both to embrace and resist his legacy.
Marshall Boswell, a pioneer in the study of Wallace, writes with dexterity and lucidity here about some of the author's favorite subjects: influence, autobiography, self-consciousness, and the need for literature to respond to what came before. Catching allusions and subtle critiques at every turn, Boswell weaves together predecessors, successors, and the man himself in a way that readers will find both instructive and fascinating.