Don DeLillo : balance at the edge of belief

Author(s)

    • Kavadlo, Jesse

Bibliographic Information

Don DeLillo : balance at the edge of belief

Jesse Kavadlo

(Modern American literature / Yoshinobu Hakutani, general editor, v. 40)

Peter Lang, c2004

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [161]-165) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Don DeLillo - winner of the National Book Award, the William Dean Howells Medal, and the Jerusalem Prize - is one of the most important novelist of the late-twentieth and early-twenty-first centuries. While his work can be understood and taught as prescient and postmodern examples of millennial culture, this book argues that DeLillo's recent novels - White Noise, Libra, Mao II, Underworld, and The Body Artist - are more concerned with spiritual crisis. Although DeLillo's world's are rife with rejection of belief and littered with faithfulness, estrangement, and desperation, his novels provide a balancing moral corrective against the conditions they describe. Speaking the vernacular of contemporary America, DeLillo explores the mysteries of what it means to be human.

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