Non-Fiction Books:

Gravity’s Rainbow, Domination, and Freedom

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Hardback
$326.99
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Description

When published in 1973, Gravity’s Rainbow expanded our sense of what the novel could be. Pynchon’s extensive references to modern science, history and culture challenged any reader, while his prose bent the rules for narrative art and his satirical practises taunted U.S. obscenity and pornography statutes. His writing thus enacts freedom even as the book’s great theme is domination: humanity’s diminished “chances for freedom” in a global military-industrial system birthed and set on its feet in World War II. Its symbol: the V-2 rocket. Gravity’s Rainbow, Domination, and Freedom broadly situates Pynchon’s novel in “long sixties” history, revealing a fiction deeply of and about its time. Herman and Weisenburger put the novel’s abiding questions about freedom in context with sixties struggles against war, restricted speech rights, ethno-racial oppression, environmental degradation and subtle new means of social and psychological control. They show the text’s close indebtedness to critiques of domination by key postwar thinkers such as Erich Fromm, Herbert Marcuse and Hannah Arendt. They detail equally powerful ways that sixties countercultural practises - free-speech resistance played out in courts, campuses, city streets and raucously satirical underground presswork - provide a clearer bearing on Pynchon’s own satirical practises and their implicit criticisms. If the System has jacketed humanity in a total domination, may not a solitary individual still assert freedom? Or has the System captured all - even supposedly immune elites - in an irremediable dominion? Reading Pynchon’s main characters and storylines, this study realises a darker Gravity’s Rainbow than critics have been willing to see.

Author Biography:

Luc Herman is a professor of English and narrative theory at the University of Antwerp. He is the coauthor of Handbook of Narrative Analysis with Bart Vervaeck and the coeditor of The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon with Inger Dalsgaard and Brian McHale. Steven Weisenburger is a professor of English and the Mossiker Chair in Humanities at Southern Methodist University. He is the author of A Gravity’s Rainbow Companion: Sources and Contexts for Pynchon’s Novel (Georgia), Fables of Subversion: Satire and the American Novel (Georgia), and Modern Medea: A Family Story of Slavery and Child-Murder from the Old South.
Release date Australia
December 30th, 2013
Audience
  • Professional & Vocational
Illustrations
5 black & white photographs
Pages
224
Dimensions
152x229x19
ISBN-13
9780820335087
Product ID
21404646

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