On Endings: American Postmodern Fiction and the Cold War

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University of Virginia Press, 2011 - History - 196 pages

What does narrative look like when the possibility of an expansive future has been called into question? This query is the driving force behind Daniel Grausam's On Endings, which seeks to show how the core texts of American postmodernism are a response to the geopolitical dynamics of the Cold War and especially to the new potential for total nuclear conflict. Postwar American fiction needs to be rethought, he argues, by highlighting postmodern experimentation as a mode of profound historical consciousness.

In Grausam's view, previous studies of fiction mimetically concerned with nuclear conflict neither engage the problems that total war might pose to narration nor take seriously the paradox of a war that narrative can never actually describe. Those few critical works that do take seriously such problems do not offer a broad account of American postmodernism. And recent work on postmodernism has offered no comprehensive historical account of the part played by nuclear weapons in the emergence of new forms of temporal and historical experience. On Endings significantly extends the project of historicizing postmodernism while returning the nuclear to a central place in the study of the Cold War.

 

Contents

The Crying of Lot 49 circa 1642 or Pynchon
42
The Time of the Nation the Time of the State
59
Unthinking the Thinkability of the Unthinkable
76
Trying to Understand End Zone
104
Richard Powers
124
Notes
163
Bibliography
179
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About the author (2011)

Daniel Grausam is Assistant Professor of English at Washington University in St. Louis and the coeditor of the forthcoming American Literature and Culture in an Age of Cold War.

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