Global Wallace : David Foster Wallace and world literature

書誌事項

Global Wallace : David Foster Wallace and world literature

Lucas Thompson

(David Foster Wallace studies / series editor, Stephen J. Burn, v. 1)

Bloomsbury Academic, 2017

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

David Foster Wallace is invariably seen as an emphatically American figure. Lucas Thompson challenges this consensus, arguing that Wallace's investments in various international literary traditions are central to both his artistic practice and his critique of US culture. Thompson shows how, time and again, Wallace's fiction draws on a diverse range of global texts, appropriating various forms of world literature in the attempt to craft fiction that critiques US culture from oblique and unexpected vantage points. Using a wide range of comparative case studies, and drawing on extensive archival research, Global Wallace reveals David Foster Wallace's substantial debts to such unexpected figures as Jamaica Kincaid, Julio Cortazar, Jean Rhys, Octavio Paz, Leo Tolstoy, Zbigniew Herbert, and Albert Camus, among many others. It also offers a more comprehensive account of the key influences that Wallace scholars have already perceived, such as Fyodor Dostoevsky, Franz Kafka, and Manuel Puig. By reassessing Wallace's body of work in relation to five broadly construed geographic territories -- Latin America, Russia, Eastern Europe, France, and Africa -- the book reveals the mechanisms with which Wallace played particular literary traditions off one another, showing how he appropriated vastly different global texts within his own fiction. By expanding the geographic coordinates of Wallace's work in this way, Global Wallace reconceptualizes contemporary American fiction, as being embedded within a global exchange of texts and ideas.

目次

Series Editor's Introduction Acknowledgments Introduction. Wallace and the World Chapter One. Wallace and World Literature Chapter Two. Wallace and Latin America Chapter Three. Wallace and Russia Chapter Four. Wallace and Eastern Europe: Kafka and Others Chapter Five. French Existentialism's Afterlives: Wallace and the Fiction of the U.S. South Chapter Six. African-American Appropriations: Race, Hip-Hop, and Popular Anthropology Conclusion. "It's a Small Continent After All"? Wallace and the World Bibliography Index

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