Loading...

American Postmodernity

Essays on the Recent Fiction of Thomas Pynchon

by Ian Copestake (Volume editor)
©2003 Conference proceedings 224 Pages

Summary

This book brings together nine original essays from Pynchon scholars around the world whose work furthers the debate concerning the nature of perceived shifts in the sensibility, style and subject-matter of Pynchon’s fiction from The Crying of Lot 49 to Mason & Dixon. Of particular concern is the complex relationship between Pynchon’s challenging and evolving œuvre and notions of postmodernity which this volume’s focus on Pynchon’s most recent fiction helps bring up-to-date. Five of the collection’s essays examine the writer’s achievement in Mason & Dixon and were first presented in 1998 as papers at King’s College, London, as part of International Pynchon Week. The volume includes contributions from renowned Pynchon scholars such as David Seed, David Thoreen and Francisco Collado Rodríquez, and offers perspectives on Pynchon’s achievement in The Crying of Lot 49, Vineland and Mason & Dixon which view those works in relation to a fascinating variety of subjects such as hybridity, mapmaking and representation, the work of Marshall McLuhan, American comic traditions, metafiction, madness in American fiction, science and ethics. Reconfirmed throughout is the ethical seriousness of a writer who remains one of American literature’s most fascinating, important and ever elusive figures.

Details

Pages
224
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039100170
Language
English
Keywords
Mason & Dixon Pynchon, Thomas Aufsatzsammlung Thomas Pynchon Postmodernity American Fiction The Crying of Lot 49 Vineland
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien, 2003. 224 pp.

Biographical notes

Ian Copestake (Volume editor)

The Editor: Ian D. Copestake (1969) was born on the Wirral and graduated from Warwick University in 1991 with a BA Hons degree in English and American literature. He completed an M.A. in American Literature at University of Leeds (1992-1993) and later received a Ph.D. at the University of Leeds (1993-2000). His thesis subject was the poetry of William Carlos Williams (twentieth-century American poetry). He is a research fellow in American literature at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität, Frankfurt. The author of various articles and reviews relating to his interests in contemporary American fiction and twentieth-century poetry, he is also editor of Rigor of Beauty: Essays in Commemoration of William Carlos Williams.

Previous

Title: American Postmodernity