World History, Literary History: Postmodernism and After

Author:

Moraru Christian,

Abstract

"World History, Literary History: Postmodernism and After. The basic question Christian Moraru raises in his contribution is about the direction in which literary history and criticism overall may be going after postmodernism. Moraru’s answer, or guess, is that literary-cultural scholarship, along with the humanities at large, would probably have to adjust to shifts in the world “out there.” As Moraru contends, our profession is already doing its best to catch up epistemologically with an increasingly strong planetary ontology, that is, with how the world most known to us—the finite planet—is and presents itself in the twenty-first century. Key here, he argues, is the lexicon and planetary phenomenology of “presentation” or presencing, rather, of an overwhelming coming into presence of that which is scattered all around us and we have been exploiting, overusing, polluting, discarding, or disregarding during the Anthropocene. In his essay, the critic attends to this resurgent presence and to what it means for literature and its historical cycles now that one of these—postmodernism—is basically complete. He does so obliquely, through a couple of marginalia to David Foster Wallace’s 1996 meganovel Infinite Jest. Keywords: literary-cultural history, criticism, postmodernism, post-postmodernism, presence, epistemology, strong ontology, David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest, Trumpism, geophobia, Anthropocene, après-garde "

Publisher

Babes-Bolyai University

Subject

General Medicine

Reference10 articles.

1. "1. Bell, Robert and William Dowling. 2005. A Reader's Companion to Infinite Jest. Bloomington, IN: Xlibris.

2. 2. Deleuze, Gilles. 2017. Difference and Repetition, trans. Paul Patton. London: Bloomsbury.

3. 3. DeLillo, Don. September 7, 1997. "The Power of History." New York Times Magazine, http://www.nytimes.com/library/books/090797article3.html (accessed May 2007).

4. 4. Doyle, Jon. 2018. "The Changing Face of Post-Postmodern Fiction: Irony, Sincerity, and Populism." Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction 59, no. 3 (Fall): 259-270.

5. 5. Ferraris, Maurizio. 2014. Manifesto of New Realism. Translated by Sarah De Sanctis. Foreword by Graham Herman. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.

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