The gospel according to David Foster Wallace : boredom and addiction in an age of distraction

Author(s)

    • Miller, Adam S.

Bibliographic Information

The gospel according to David Foster Wallace : boredom and addiction in an age of distraction

Adam S. Miller

(New directions in religion and literature)

Bloomsbury, 2016

  • : hb

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [117]) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Gospel According to David Foster Wallace is the first book to explore key religious themes - from boredom to addiction, and distraction - in the work of one of America's most celebrated contemporary novelists. In a series of short, topic-focused chapters, the book joins a selection of key scenes from Wallace's novels Infinite Jest and The Pale King with clear explanations of how they contribute to his overall account of what it means to be a human being in the 21st century. Adam Miller explores how Wallace's work masterfully investigates the nature of first-world boredom and shows, in the process, how easy it is to get addicted to distraction (chemical, electronic, or otherwise). Implicitly critiquing, excising, and repurposing elements of AA's Twelve Step program, Wallace suggests that the practice of prayer (regardless of belief in God), the patient application of attention to things that seem ordinary and boring, and the internalization of cliches may be the antidote to much of what ails us in the 21st century.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Schemas 3. Maps 4. Contortions 5. Taxes 6. Addiction 7. Desire 8. Despair 9. Distraction 10. Watching 11. Assassins 12. Irony 13. Masks 14. Beauty 15. Time 16. Deskwork 17. Sewage 18. Size 19. Silence 20. Immersion 21. Indifference 22. Boredom 23. Revelations 24. Heroes 25. Awareness 26. Abiding 27. Bodies 28. Prayer 29. Cliches 30. Epiphany Bibliography Index

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