Acknowledgments 1. Postmodern (Midwestern) Morality: The Act of Affirming Humanity in a Screwed-up World 2. Searching for Answers in the Early Novels: Or, What Are We Here for Anyway? 3. Apocalyptic Grumbling: Postmodern Righteousness in the Late Novels Notes Works Cited Index
Todd F. Davis is Associate Professor of English at Penn State at Altoona. He is coauthor (with Kenneth Womack) of Formalist Criticism and Reader-Response Theory and coeditor (with Womack) of Reading the Beatles: Cultural Studies, Literary Criticism, and the Fab Four (also published by SUNY Press), Mapping the Ethical Turn: A Reader in Ethics, Culture, and Literary Theory, and The Critical Response to John Irving. He is also the author of a book of poetry, Ripe.
"In this thoughtful treatment of the works of Kurt Vonnegut, Davis
posits the view that this prolific and significant novelist is
something of an anomaly: a postmodern humanist. Davis begins with a
lengthy and sophisticated discussion of how postmodernism … seems
to preclude humanism as a viable vision … and shows that the
novelist remains committed to trying to show human beings how to be
more decent." — CHOICE
"Postmodern theory may not strike every reader as the best frame
for understanding Vonnegut's work, but Davis's effort requires that
readers revisit and reconsider—worthwhile endeavors in this case."
— ForeWord
"Davis's book is an engaging examination of the issue at the heart
of all Vonnegut's fiction — Vonnegut's humanism. With acumen and
grace, Davis exposes Vonnegut's ongoing relevance to the twentieth
and twenty-first centuries and illustrates how Vonnegut manages to
retain his status as one of the most important figureheads in
postmodern literature while remaining socially conscious and
humane. Kurt Vonnegut's Crusade should be mandatory reading for all
students, fans, and scholars of Vonnegut's canon." — Kevin
Alexander Boon, editor of At Millennium's End: New Essays on the
Work of Kurt Vonnegut
"Kurt Vonnegut has been studied (and argued about) for nearly forty
years, but no one had thought to examine his readership until now.
Todd Davis's book not only resolves ethical problems, but also
clarifies Vonnegut's unique appeal—which, thank goodness, is to
what's best in all of us." — Jerome Klinkowitz, author of The
Vonnegut Effect
"As in its subject's own novels, there is a deceptive depth to Todd
Davis's book on Kurt Vonnegut. Although writing in the voice of a
scholar employing a standard close-reading strategy, Davis in fact
engages some of the most crucial fissures in postmodern studies:
the role, function, and value of ethics, humanism, and, ultimately,
literary achievement in postmodern narrative. Davis's clear prose
makes these complex issues decipherable and debatable for both
academics and more casual fans of Vonnegut and postmodern fiction."
— Edward Watts, author of An American Colony: Regionalism and the
Roots of Midwestern Culture
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