Conspiracy and Paranoia In Contemporary American Fiction Conspiracy and Paranoia In Contemporary American Fiction

Conspiracy and Paranoia In Contemporary American Fiction

The Works of Don DeLillo and Joseph McElroy

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    • USD 59.99

Descripción editorial

Under the influence of Thomas Pynchon, a generation of postmodern American writers has explored the theme of conspiracy and paranoia, its origins in contemporary American culture, and its political and ideological ramifications. This intense preoccupation with paranoid forms of conceptual organization has helped critics to represent postmodernism as a coherent phenomenon and define it as a period. While for many readers the assumption of periodic homogeneity is still valid, postmodern fiction has, in fact, been diversifying rapidly in the course of its development over the last 20 years. In the works of Don DeLillo and Joseph McElroy, a new set of narrative premises, which mark a significant paradigmatic shift within postmodern American fiction, has begun to emerge from the dialogic interplay with Pynchonesque paranoia.

GÉNERO
Referencia
PUBLICADO
1994
1 de septiembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
191
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Peter Lang GmbH
VENDEDOR
Peter Lang AG
TAMAÑO
800.5
KB

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