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E-book: Fictions of Proximity: Skepticism, Romanticism, and the Wallace Nexus

  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Pub. Date: 02-Nov-2023
  • Publisher: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781666923193
  • Format - PDF+DRM
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  • This ebook is for personal use only. E-Books are non-refundable.
  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Pub. Date: 02-Nov-2023
  • Publisher: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781666923193

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"Fictions of Proximity explores the nexus of writers around David Foster Wallace who shaped a trend in literature the study calls the 'post-positivist novel.' It provides new readings of these writers, both of their canonical and lesser-known works, and situates them with respect to prominent figures in contemporary post-positivist philosophy"--

Fictions of Proximity explores the nexus of writers around David Foster Wallace who shaped a trend in literature the study calls the ‘post-positivist novel.’ It provides new readings of these writers, both of their canonical and lesser-known works, and situates them with respect to prominent figures in contemporary post-positivist philosophy.



Fictions of Proximity: Skepticism, Romanticism, and the Wallace Nexus tells the story of a nexus of contemporary novelists around David Foster Wallace who took up the legacy of logical positivism and reworked it between the 1980s and the 2000s in a way that has affinities with romanticism. The book shows how the writers of this ‘Wallace nexus’ use fiction’s complexities to challenge the idea that in human interactions, only complete fusion and transparency may count as instances of knowing. In place of this positivistic ideal of absorption, the book offers the freshly defined concept of ‘proximity,’ a closeness with separateness. It reads key novels of contemporary Anglo-American literature as ‘fictions of proximity,’ i.e., as texts that dramatize, problematize, and enact the movement into this position of proximity. To tell this story, the book draws on unpublished archival materials and understudied connections, advancing new interpretations of four novelists: David Foster Wallace, David Markson, Bret Easton Ellis, and Zadie Smith. Fictions of Proximity provides new readings of these writers, both of their canonical texts and of lesser-known works, and situates them with respect to prominent figures in contemporary post-positivist philosophy.

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Part I: David Foster Wallace at the End of History

Chapter 1: Varieties of Post-Positivism: Pragmatism and Romanticism

Chapter 2: The Powerful, Dual-Functioning Part: Romantic Subjectivity in
David Foster Wallace and Mark Costellos Signifying Rappers

Part II: Skepticism in Contemporary Fiction

Chapter 3: Looking in Horror or Ecstasy: Romantic Desire in David
Marksons Wittgensteins Mistress

Chapter 4: Brechtian Rhetoric and Bret Easton Elliss American Psycho

Part III: Ironically Earnest, Earnestly Ironic: Fiction after Positivism

Chapter 5: Aporia in David Foster Wallaces Infinite Jest

Chapter 6: The great unequivocal International Gestures: Benjaminian Gestus
in Zadie Smiths The Autograph Man

Epilogue: Breathing with Wallace

Bibliography

About the Author
Tim Personn teaches literature and writing at the University of Victoria.