Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Inoperable Machine: A Media History of Late
Postmodernism
Section One: The Tiny Box Wherein Everything is Solved: New
Media Narrative, Communication Technology, and the Conversation
Novels of William Gaddis
Problems in Two-Dimensions
Postmodern Issues / Good Intentions: New Media Art and Method
Even Agnostics Have Truth: The Verity of Bill Viola
Nauman, Burden, Jokes, and Cruelty
Two Sides of a Shadow: Stelarc, Chat Bots, and the Phantom
Libido
Non-attribution: Corporeal Fluidity in William Gaddis's
Conversation Novels
Section Two: Grooves on the Feeling Knob: Systematic
Transgression in William T. Vollmann's The Rainbow Stories and Bret
Easton Ellis's American Psycho
Framing Excess: An Introduction to Systematic Transgression
Sensory Movements: William T. Vollmann, The Rainbow Stories, and
"Emotional Calculus"
Less Sad the Second Time Around: American Psycho and the Selfhood
of Repetition
Section Three: "Way Closer to the Soul than Mere Tastelessness
Can Get": David Foster Wallace and Transcendent
Extra-Textuality
Unforeseen Ruptures: David Foster Wallace's Big Break, or, The
Legacy of Experimentalism
"Sudden Awakening to the Fact that the Mischief is Irretrievably
Done": Epiphanic Structure in Infinite Jest
The Great Beyond: Textual Relationality in Brief Interviews with
Hideous Men
Epilogue
References
Index
Explores the impact of new media technologies on postmodern and contemporary American literature, from William Gaddis to David Foster Wallace.
Casey Michael Henry is Carl H. Pforzheimer Postdoctoral Fellow in English at The City College of New York, USA.
The question of a possible lineage between the work of Burden,
Wallace, and Candy Crush is an intriguing and perhaps subver¬sive
one to ask. Henry’s eagerness to make these connections speaks to
the intellectual daring on display in this book.
*Orbit*
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