David Foster Wallace and ""The Long Thing"": New Essays on the Novels

Author:   Marshall Boswell (Rhodes College, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9781628924534


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   25 September 2014
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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David Foster Wallace and ""The Long Thing"": New Essays on the Novels


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Overview

Of the twelve books David Foster Wallace published both during his lifetime and posthumously, only three were novels. Nevertheless, Wallace always thought of himself primarily as a novelist. From his college years at Amherst, when he wrote his first novel as part of a creative honors thesis, to his final days, Wallace was buried in a novel project, which he often referred to as ""the Long Thing."" Meanwhile, the short stories and journalistic assignments he worked on during those years he characterized as ""playing hooky from a certain Larger Thing."" Wallace was also a specific kind of novelist, devoted to producing a specific kind of novel, namely the omnivorous, culture-consuming ""encyclopedic"" novel, as described in 1976 by Edward Mendelson in a ground-breaking essay on Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow. David Foster Wallace and ""The Long Thing"" is a state-of-the art guide through Wallace's three major works, including the generation-defining Infinite Jest. These essays provide fresh new readings of each of Wallace's novels as well as thematic essays that trace out patterns and connections across the three works. Most importantly, the collection includes six chapters on Wallace's unfinished novel, The Pale King, which will prove to be foundational for future scholars of this important text.

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Author:   Marshall Boswell (Rhodes College, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic USA
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.360kg
ISBN:  

9781628924534


ISBN 10:   1628924535
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   25 September 2014
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations Preface: David Foster Wallace and the Long Thing Marshall Boswell, Rhodes College, USA Part I: Wallace as Novelist David Foster Wallace and the Novel of Ideas Adam Kelly, University of York, United Kingdom Wallace and Empathy: A Narrative Approach Toon Staes, University of Antwerp, Belgium Boredom, Irony, and Anxiety: Wallace and the Kierkegaardian View of the Self Allard den Dulk, Amsterdam University College, Netherlands Modelling Community and Narrative in Infinite Jest and The Pale King Andrew Warren, Harvard University, USA Part II: The Novels The Broom of the System (1989) Then Out of the Rubble : David Foster Wallace's Early Fiction Bradley J. Fest, University of Pittsburgh, USA Infinite Jest (1996) Representing Entertainment in Infinite Jest Philip Sayers, University of Toronto, Canada Encyclopedic Novels and the Cruft of Fiction: Infinite Jest's Endnotes David Letzler, CUNY Graduate Center, USA The Pale King (2011) A Paradigm for the Life of Consciousness : The Pale King Stephen Burn, University of Glasgow, Scotland What Am I, a Machine? : Humans and Information in The Pale King Conley Wouters, Brandeis University, USA The Politics of Boredom and the Boredom of Politics in The Pale King Ralph Clare, Boise State University, USA Trickle-Down Citizenship: Taxes and Civic Responsibility in The Pale King Marshall Boswell, Rhodes College, USA Works Cited Notes on Contributors Index

Reviews

Edited by one of the premiere critics of David Foster Wallace's work, this sparkling collection of essays on Wallace's novels offers a host of new insights about Wallace's novels, including a healthy selection of essays on The Pale King, his last, unfinished novel published posthumously. All readers of Wallace--indeed, all readers of contemporary fiction--will benefit from these new perspectives on one of the most important writers to have emerged in the last thirty years of American literature. Patrick O'Donnell, Professor and Chair of English, Michigan State University, USA David Foster Wallace and 'The Long Thing' provides the first concerted generic consideration of Wallace's work, by using its focus on Wallace's novels and novella to explore his understandings and uses of the long form. While some essays examine his repurposing of structural aspects of the novel inherited from earlier postmodernism, like encyclopedicness and heteroglossia, others investigate ways in which his long works discover new communicative potential in the novel as print medium, and as intimately intertwined with the network of visual and cultural media in which it lies. Along the way, these essays introduce fruitful new frameworks for reading Wallace's work, including models of consciousness and Jamesian civic responsibility, while offering some surprising new readings of familiar themes like irony and communication. Insightful and deft textual analysis, especially of The Pale King, provides an additional delight. This collection will be a welcome addition to Wallace studies for all readers, scholars, and fans of Wallace's fiction. Mary K. Holland, Associate Professor of English, SUNY New Paltz, USA and author of Succeeding Postmodernism: Language and Humanism in Contemporary American Literature If you are obsessed with David Foster Wallace's novels, or even if you are only a causal reader (is there such a thing?), you will want to consult the essays in this volume. At a moment when the consensus about Wallace is congealing prematurely around a handful of canonical themes - Infinite Jest is about addiction, Pale King is about boredom, Wallace's fiction in general aspires to escape the gravitational pull of postmodern irony, and so on, you know the drill - these essays open up other perspectives and fresh alternatives. Even when they revisit the canonical motifs of Wallace criticism, they succeed in casting a bracingly estranging light on tried-and-true themes. Read these essays and don't settle for the same old same old! Brian McHale, Arts & Humanities Distinguished Professor of English, The Ohio State University, USA


Edited by one of the premiere critics of David Foster Wallace's work, this sparkling collection of essays on Wallace's novels offers a host of new insights about Wallace's novels, including a healthy selection of essays on The Pale King, his last, unfinished novel published posthumously. All readers of Wallace--indeed, all readers of contemporary fiction--will benefit from these new perspectives on one of the most important writers to have emerged in the last thirty years of American literature. Patrick O'Donnell, Professor and Chair of English, Michigan State University, USA David Foster Wallace and 'The Long Thing' provides the first concerted generic consideration of Wallace's work, by using its focus on Wallace's novels and novella to explore his understandings and uses of the long form. While some essays examine his repurposing of structural aspects of the novel inherited from earlier postmodernism, like encyclopedicness and heteroglossia, others investigate ways in which his long works discover new communicative potential in the novel as print medium, and as intimately intertwined with the network of visual and cultural media in which it lies. Along the way, these essays introduce fruitful new frameworks for reading Wallace's work, including models of consciousness and Jamesian civic responsibility, while offering some surprising new readings of familiar themes like irony and communication. Insightful and deft textual analysis, especially of The Pale King, provides an additional delight. This collection will be a welcome addition to Wallace studies for all readers, scholars, and fans of Wallace's fiction. Mary K. Holland, Associate Professor of English, SUNY New Paltz, USA and author of Succeeding Postmodernism: Language and Humanism in Contemporary American Literature If you are obsessed with David Foster Wallace's novels, or even if you are only a causal reader (is there such a thing?), you will want to consult the essays in this volume. At a moment when the consensus about Wallace is congealing prematurely around a handful of canonical themes - Infinite Jest is about addiction, Pale King is about boredom, Wallace's fiction in general aspires to escape the gravitational pull of postmodern irony, and so on, you know the drill - these essays open up other perspectives and fresh alternatives. Even when they revisit the canonical motifs of Wallace criticism, they succeed in casting a bracingly estranging light on tried-and-true themes. Read these essays and don't settle for the same old same old! Brian McHale, Arts & Humanities Distinguished Professor of English, The Ohio State University, USA David Foster Wallace first and foremost considered himself to be a novelist. The contributors to David Foster Wallace and The Long Thing rousingly show that we are only at the beginning of our collective journey through - and understanding of - Wallace's three massively, spectacularly important novels. Among its many delights, this collection moves beyond the critical commonplaces of what it's already fair to call David Foster Wallace Studies, and brings together bracing and original essays on Wallace's tornadic third novel The Pale King. An impressive achievement. Lee Konstantinou, Assistant Professor English, University of Maryland, USA So much remains to be said about David Foster Wallace's seismic role in reshaping American fiction. In Marshall Boswell's new collection, established scholars and new voices provide compelling, fine-grained accounts of both individual novels and the threads that connect them. Andrew Hoberek, Associate Professor of English, University of Missouri, USA


A new collection of essays, edited by the pioneering Wallace scholar, Marshall Boswell, is dedicated to the literary form most conspicuously suited to a writer intent on communicating entire informational universes within and without ... The essays here reflect the polymathic scope of Wallace's engagement with the world and the world of ideas ... A principle value of this collection is to gather early critical accounts of an encyclopedic novel destined to refine our view of Wallace's achievement ... As another prominent Wallace scholar, Stephen J. Burn, puts it here, we are still 'at the prototype phase of The Pale King criticism ... it is only when we start to disentangle what Wallace originally planned from the published text ... that we can begin the critical project of understanding The Pale King in earnest. Times Literary Supplement (reviewed by Paul Quinn) The book succeeds because the essays are not only substantial and provocative, but also because they are, like Wallace's novels, in conversation with each other. It will lead the conversation about Wallace in exciting new directions. PublishersWeekly.com Edited by one of the premiere critics of David Foster Wallace's work, this sparkling collection of essays on Wallace's novels offers a host of new insights about Wallace's novels, including a healthy selection of essays on The Pale King, his last, unfinished novel published posthumously. All readers of Wallace--indeed, all readers of contemporary fiction--will benefit from these new perspectives on one of the most important writers to have emerged in the last thirty years of American literature. Patrick O'Donnell, Professor and Chair of English, Michigan State University, USA David Foster Wallace and 'The Long Thing' provides the first concerted generic consideration of Wallace's work, by using its focus on Wallace's novels and novella to explore his understandings and uses of the long form. While some essays examine his repurposing of structural aspects of the novel inherited from earlier postmodernism, like encyclopedicness and heteroglossia, others investigate ways in which his long works discover new communicative potential in the novel as print medium, and as intimately intertwined with the network of visual and cultural media in which it lies. Along the way, these essays introduce fruitful new frameworks for reading Wallace's work, including models of consciousness and Jamesian civic responsibility, while offering some surprising new readings of familiar themes like irony and communication. Insightful and deft textual analysis, especially of The Pale King, provides an additional delight. This collection will be a welcome addition to Wallace studies for all readers, scholars, and fans of Wallace's fiction. Mary K. Holland, Associate Professor of English, SUNY New Paltz, USA and author of Succeeding Postmodernism: Language and Humanism in Contemporary American Literature If you are obsessed with David Foster Wallace's novels, or even if you are only a causal reader (is there such a thing?), you will want to consult the essays in this volume. At a moment when the consensus about Wallace is congealing prematurely around a handful of canonical themes - Infinite Jest is about addiction, Pale King is about boredom, Wallace's fiction in general aspires to escape the gravitational pull of postmodern irony, and so on, you know the drill - these essays open up other perspectives and fresh alternatives. Even when they revisit the canonical motifs of Wallace criticism, they succeed in casting a bracingly estranging light on tried-and-true themes. Read these essays and don't settle for the same old same old! Brian McHale, Arts & Humanities Distinguished Professor of English, The Ohio State University, USA David Foster Wallace first and foremost considered himself to be a novelist. The contributors to David Foster Wallace and The Long Thing rousingly show that we are only at the beginning of our collective journey through - and understanding of - Wallace's three massively, spectacularly important novels. Among its many delights, this collection moves beyond the critical commonplaces of what it's already fair to call David Foster Wallace Studies, and brings together bracing and original essays on Wallace's tornadic third novel The Pale King. An impressive achievement. Lee Konstantinou, Assistant Professor English, University of Maryland, USA So much remains to be said about David Foster Wallace's seismic role in reshaping American fiction. In Marshall Boswell's new collection, established scholars and new voices provide compelling, fine-grained accounts of both individual novels and the threads that connect them. Andrew Hoberek, Associate Professor of English, University of Missouri, USA [This] collection is a valuable addition to Wallace scholarship -- Kiron Ward Textual Practice


A new collection of essays, edited by the pioneering Wallace scholar, Marshall Boswell, is dedicated to the literary form most conspicuously suited to a writer intent on communicating entire informational universes within and without ... The essays here reflect the polymathic scope of Wallace's engagement with the world and the world of ideas ... A principle value of this collection is to gather early critical accounts of an encyclopedic novel destined to refine our view of Wallace's achievement ... As another prominent Wallace scholar, Stephen J. Burn, puts it here, we are still `at the prototype phase of The Pale King criticism ... it is only when we start to disentangle what Wallace originally planned from the published text ... that we can begin the critical project of understanding The Pale King in earnest. * Times Literary Supplement (reviewed by Paul Quinn) * The book succeeds because the essays are not only substantial and provocative, but also because they are, like Wallace's novels, in conversation with each other. It will lead the conversation about Wallace in exciting new directions. * PublishersWeekly.com * Edited by one of the premiere critics of David Foster Wallace's work, this sparkling collection of essays on Wallace's novels offers a host of new insights about Wallace's novels, including a healthy selection of essays on The Pale King, his last, unfinished novel published posthumously. All readers of Wallace--indeed, all readers of contemporary fiction--will benefit from these new perspectives on one of the most important writers to have emerged in the last thirty years of American literature. * Patrick O'Donnell, Professor and Chair of English, Michigan State University, USA * David Foster Wallace and 'The Long Thing' provides the first concerted generic consideration of Wallace's work, by using its focus on Wallace's novels and novella to explore his understandings and uses of the long form. While some essays examine his repurposing of structural aspects of the novel inherited from earlier postmodernism, like encyclopedicness and heteroglossia, others investigate ways in which his long works discover new communicative potential in the novel as print medium, and as intimately intertwined with the network of visual and cultural media in which it lies. Along the way, these essays introduce fruitful new frameworks for reading Wallace's work, including models of consciousness and Jamesian civic responsibility, while offering some surprising new readings of familiar themes like irony and communication. Insightful and deft textual analysis, especially of The Pale King, provides an additional delight. This collection will be a welcome addition to Wallace studies for all readers, scholars, and fans of Wallace's fiction. * Mary K. Holland, Associate Professor of English, SUNY New Paltz, USA and author of Succeeding Postmodernism: Language and Humanism in Contemporary American Literature * If you are obsessed with David Foster Wallace's novels, or even if you are only a causal reader (is there such a thing?), you will want to consult the essays in this volume. At a moment when the consensus about Wallace is congealing prematurely around a handful of canonical themes - Infinite Jest is about addiction, Pale King is about boredom, Wallace's fiction in general aspires to escape the gravitational pull of postmodern irony, and so on, you know the drill - these essays open up other perspectives and fresh alternatives. Even when they revisit the canonical motifs of Wallace criticism, they succeed in casting a bracingly estranging light on tried-and-true themes. Read these essays and don't settle for the same old same old! * Brian McHale, Arts & Humanities Distinguished Professor of English, The Ohio State University, USA * David Foster Wallace first and foremost considered himself to be a novelist. The contributors to David Foster Wallace and The Long Thing rousingly show that we are only at the beginning of our collective journey through - and understanding of - Wallace's three massively, spectacularly important novels. Among its many delights, this collection moves beyond the critical commonplaces of what it's already fair to call David Foster Wallace Studies, and brings together bracing and original essays on Wallace's tornadic third novel The Pale King. An impressive achievement. * Lee Konstantinou, Assistant Professor English, University of Maryland, USA * So much remains to be said about David Foster Wallace's seismic role in reshaping American fiction. In Marshall Boswell's new collection, established scholars and new voices provide compelling, fine-grained accounts of both individual novels and the threads that connect them. * Andrew Hoberek, Associate Professor of English, University of Missouri, USA * [This] collection is a valuable addition to Wallace scholarship -- Kiron Ward * Textual Practice *


Author Information

Marshall Boswell is Professor and Chair of English at Rhodes College, USA. He is the author of John Updike's Rabbit Tetralogy: Mastered Irony in Motion and Understanding David Foster Wallace. He is the co-editor, with Stephen Burn, of A Companion to David Foster Wallace Studies and served as Guest Editor for a two-part Special Issue of Studies in the Novel devoted to David Foster Wallace's novels. He is also the the author of two works of fiction, Trouble with Girls and the novel Alternative Atlanta.

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