Postmodern American literature and its other

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Postmodern American literature and its other

W. Lawrence Hogue

University of Illinois Press, c2009

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Includes bibliographical references (p. [199]-208 ) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Although literary postmodernism has been defined in terms of difference, multiplicity, heterogeneity, and plurality, some of the most vaunted authors of postmodern American fiction--such as Thomas Pynchon, Paul Auster, and other white male authors--often fail to adequately represent the distinct subjectivities of African Americans, American Indians, Latinos and Latinas, women, the poor of the center, and the global periphery. In this groundbreaking study, W. Lawrence Hogue exposes the ways in which much postmodern American literature privileges a typically Eurocentric, male-oriented type of subjectivity, often at the expense of victimizing or objectifying the ethnic or gendered Other. In contrast to the dominant white male perspective on postmodernism, Hogue points to African American, American Indian, and women authors within the American postmodern canon--Rikki Ducornet, Kathy Acker, Ishmael Reed, and Gerald Vizenor--who work against these structures of stereotype and bias, resulting in a literary postmodernism that more genuinely respects and represents difference. He argues that most postmodern African American, American Indian, and women writers experience and write about postmodernity in ways that are substantially different from white men, since they are intimately concerned with the existence of racism and sexism. These "Other" authors, who are searching for new cultural forms and paradigms to describe themselves outside modernity's conventions, define themselves according to their own logic, one that eschews fixed notions of identity in favor of a network of contextual, partial, contradictory, and shifting identifications.

Table of Contents

Preface ix Acknowledgments xv 1. Postmodern American Literature and Its Other: The Euro-American Male, Woman, the African American, the American Indian, the Poor, and the Global Periphery 1 2. The Privileged, Sovereign, Euro-American (Male), Post/Modern Subject and Its Construction of the Other: Thomas Pynchon's V. and Paul Auster's The New York Trilogy 42 3. Constructing Woman as Subject: Rikki Ducornet's The Jade Cabinet and Kathy Acker's Pussy, King of the Pirates 94 4. Signifying Planetary Postmodernity: Ischmael Reed's Mumbo Jumbo and Gerald Vizenor's The Heirs of Columbus 143 5. Conclusion 189 Notes 193 Works Cited 199 Index 209

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