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Reminiscence and Re-creation in Contemporary American Fiction

  • Stacey Olster, State University of New York, Stony Brook
  • Hardback
  • ISBN:9780521363839
  • Publication date:June 1989
  • 227pages
      • Dimensions: 204 x 159 mm
      • Weight: 0.515kg
        71.0097805213638390GB0en_GBGBP£
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      Post-modernist fiction apparently presents a world of chance and randomness, devoid of historical intelligibility. Focusing on American post-modernist writers, Stacey Olster offers a challenge to this perception, showing how the experience of political and historical events has shaped the novelist's perspective. Communism after World War II proved particularly instrumental in this capacity; the failure of the Communist ideal in Russia forced a change in the literary perspective of history during the 1950s. Olster analyzes in detail historical narrative configurations in the works of a pivotal group of writers. Norman Mailer, Thomas Pynchon, John Barth, Robert Coover and E. L. Doctorow share a common vision of historical movement in the shape of an open-ended spiral. The modes of temporal movement constructed by these authors manage to recall an early Puritan prototype while remaining nonapocalyptic in direction.

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