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Don DeLillo after the Millennium
Currents and Currencies
Jacqueline A. Zubeck (Anthology Editor) , Karim Daanoune (Contributor) , Scott Dill (Contributor) , Graley Herren (Contributor) , Jesse Kavadlo (Contributor) , Matt Kavanagh (Contributor) , Randy Laist (Contributor) , Elise Martucci (Contributor) , Maciej Maslowski (Contributor) , Mark Osteen (Contributor) , Jennifer L. Vala (Contributor)
Don DeLillo after the Millennium
Currents and Currencies
Jacqueline A. Zubeck (Anthology Editor) , Karim Daanoune (Contributor) , Scott Dill (Contributor) , Graley Herren (Contributor) , Jesse Kavadlo (Contributor) , Matt Kavanagh (Contributor) , Randy Laist (Contributor) , Elise Martucci (Contributor) , Maciej Maslowski (Contributor) , Mark Osteen (Contributor) , Jennifer L. Vala (Contributor)
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Description
Don DeLillo after the Millennium: Currents and Currencies examines all the author’s work published in the 21st century: The Body Artist, Cosmopolis, Falling Man, Point Omega, and Zero K, the plays Love-Lies-Bleeding and The Word for Snow, and the short stories in The Angel Esmeralda. What topic doesn’t DeLillo tackle? Cyber-capital and currency markets, ontology and intelligence, global warming and cryogenics, Don DeLillo continues to ponder the significance of present cultural currents and to anticipate the waves of the future. Performance art and ethics, drama and euthanasia, space studies and the constrictions of time, DeLillo perspicaciously reads our culture, giving voice to the rhythms of our vernacular and diction. Rich and resonant, his work is so multifaceted in its attention that it accommodates a wide variety of critical approaches while its fine and filigreed prose commends him to a poetic appreciation as well. Don DeLillo after the Millennium brings together an international cast of scholars who examine DeLillo’s work from many critical perspectives, exploring the astonishing output of an author who continues to tell our stories and show us ourselves.
Table of Contents
Part 1 - “Collateral Crisis”
Chapter 1 - “Collateral Crisis: Don DeLillo’s Critique of Cyber-Capital” - Matt Kavanagh
Chapter 2 - “The Currency of DeLillo’s Cosmopolis” - Mark Osteen
Part 2 - “Here and Gone”
Chapter 3 - “Here and Gone: Point Omega’s Extraordinary Rendition” - Jesse Kavadlo
Chapter 4 - “Place as Active Receptacle in Don DeLillo’s The Angel Esmeralda: Nine Stories” - Elise Martucci
Chapter 5 - “Mourning Becomes Electric: The Body Artist & Falling Man” - Jacqueline A. Zubeck
Part 3 - “Ontological Crossings”
Chapter 6 - “Love-Lies-Bleeding Self-Portrait of the Artist as a Dying Man” - Graley Herren
Chapter 7 - “‘The art, the artist, the landscape, the sky’:Ontological Crossings in Love-Lies-Bleeding” - Randy Laist
Part 4 - “Time, time, time”
Chapter 8 - “Don DeLillo, the Contemporary Novel, and the End of Secular Time” - Scott Dill
Chapter 9 - “Cinematic Time, Geologic Time, Narrative Time” - Majiek Maslowski
Part 5 - “Poetics of Survival”
Chapter 10 - “The Rough Shape of a Cross:” Chiastic Events in Don DeLillo’s “Baader-Meinhof” - Karim Daanoune
Chapter 11 - “DeLillo’s Poetics of Survival: A Case Study” - Jennifer L. Vala
Product details
Published | Jul 06 2020 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 272 |
ISBN | 9798216271253 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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As with any edited collection, some chapters are stronger than others. However, it is an important contribution to the field, which adds to the growing body of scholarship on the most recent works by an author whose career dates back to the 1960s. This volume particularly demonstrates why more attention needs to be paid to DeLillo’s formally ascetic “late stage”: as in Hemingway’s so-called “Iceberg Theory,” DeLillo’s deliberately concise sentencesreveal only a fraction of the depths that lie beneath the surface.
Orbit
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This volume, which brings together established DeLillo scholars and smart newcomers, is timely in more senses than one. Its able contributors are mindful of DeLillo's career continuities (his interest in language, his prescience, his attention to both the main currents and the eddies of American culture) even as they explore the distinctive features of this author's robust post-millennial oeuvre, including novels, short stories, and drama. An indispensable collection for all who take an interest in DeLillo, in contemporary letters, and in the world as it is revealed by our fictions.
David Cowart, University of South Carolina