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Pynchon's Postnational Imagination
Dissertationsschrift

English · Hardback

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'Pynchon's Postnational Imagination' is the first monograph to critically analyze Thomas Pynchon's novels with regard to issues of nations, nationality, national identity, nationalism, and the very idea of the national: nation-ness. It argues that Pynchon's fiction can best be conceptualized as "postnational", that is, as working towards dismantling the hegemony of nation-ness as a metanarrative. The study seeks to establish a critical theory of postnationalism that helps conceptualize this complex literary practice.It combines established theories of nation-ness with recent attempts to think beyond the nation, drawing on the ideas of Renan, Gellner and Anderson as well as Habermas, Albrow, Appadurai, and Hardt and Negri in order to offer a viable postnational theory that is as pertinent to literary studies as to other fields. It presents various postnational strategies,most notably that of parageography, to show in detailed critical readings of 'Gravity's Rainbow' (1973) and 'Mason & Dixon' (1997) that Pynchon's novels both exemplify and describe a postnational imagination.

Summary

'Pynchon's Postnational Imagination' is the first monograph to critically analyze Thomas Pynchon's novels with regard to issues of nations, nationality, national identity, nationalism, and the very idea of the national: nation-ness. It argues that Pynchon's fiction can best be conceptualized as "postnational", that is, as working towards dismantling the hegemony of nation-ness as a metanarrative. The study seeks to establish a critical theory of postnationalism that helps conceptualize this complex literary practice.It combines established theories of nation-ness with recent attempts to think beyond the nation, drawing on the ideas of Renan, Gellner and Anderson as well as Habermas, Albrow, Appadurai, and Hardt and Negri in order to offer a viable postnational theory that is as pertinent to literary studies as to other fields. It presents various postnational strategies,most notably that of parageography, to show in detailed critical readings of 'Gravity's Rainbow' (1973) and 'Mason & Dixon' (1997) that Pynchon's novels both exemplify and describe a postnational imagination.

Product details

Authors Sascha Pöhlmann, Sascha Pölhmann
Publisher Universitätsverlag Winter
 
Languages English
Content Book
Product form Hardback
Publication date 03.08.2010
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > English linguistics / literary studies
 
EAN 9783825357719
ISBN 978-3-8253-5771-9
Pages 381
Dimensions (packing) 13.5 x 21 cm
Weight (packing) 534 g
 
Series American Studies / A Monograph Series > 188
American Studies > Vol.188
American Studies - A Monograph Series > 188
American Studies > 188
Subjects Globalisierung, Literaturtheorie, Amerikanische Literatur, Transnationalismus, postmoderne Literatur, Postnationalismus
 

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