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    <pubDate>Sun, 26 May 2013 04:12:33 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>The Disappearance of the Real - Mass Media in Thomas Pynchon,  Don DeLillo and Cormac McCarthy</title>
      <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2307/499</link>
      <description>&lt;Title&gt;The Disappearance of the Real - Mass Media in Thomas Pynchon,  Don DeLillo and Cormac McCarthy&lt;/Title&gt;
&lt;Authors&gt;Sorrentino, Giuseppe&lt;/Authors&gt;
&lt;Issue Date&gt;2009-05-12&lt;/Issue Date&gt;
&lt;Abstract&gt;Università degli Studi di Roma Tre&#xD;
Dipartimento Studi Americani&#xD;
Giuseppe Sorrentino&#xD;
The Disappearance of the Real&#xD;
Mass Media in Thomas Pynchon,  Don DeLillo,  and Cormac McCarthy&#xD;
ABSTRACT&#xD;
Since the late 1940s America has witnessed the enormous diffusion of visual media. The&#xD;
"spectacularization" of reality,  together with the image-oriented language that characterizes contemporary&#xD;
communication,  became an essential element of the way in which the world is experienced. What Guy&#xD;
Debord prophesied in The Society of Spectacle has all but come true. Televised events,  such as 9/11,  the&#xD;
funerals of Mother Theresa or Princess Diana,  the World Cup in soccer,  have proven his crucial statement:&#xD;
"all that was once lived directly is now removed in a representation." The role of mass media has been&#xD;
"narrated" and analyzed endlessly by novelists,  commonly designated as "postmodern, " who make&#xD;
constant reference to television and cinema in shaping people's imaginary.&#xD;
This project examines the work of three representative American post modernists (Pynchon,  DeLillo, &#xD;
McCarthy) in relation to mass media. It is a comparative study that analyzes three different expressions of&#xD;
literary postmodernism in the United States: the surrealistic,  kaleidoscopic prose of Thomas Pynchon; the&#xD;
bold,  linguistically elegant narratives of Don DeLillo; the Faulknerian,  biblical style of Cormac McCarthy. The&#xD;
thesis is characterized by an allegorical reading of the texts,  theoretically inspired by Marshall McLuhan's&#xD;
use of literature as a tool to comprehend the world of technology and Jacques Ellul's critique of that world.&#xD;
Thus what is pointed out in the texts is the role of mass media spectacles; they are analyzed from different&#xD;
perspectives based on the various characters presented: in this way,  for example,  Oedipa Mass in The&#xD;
Crying of Lot 49 becomes an allegory of a confused universal spectator confronting the overwhelming&#xD;
power of television,  Esmeralda becomes a religious icon on a billboard in DeLillo's Underworld ,  and Judge&#xD;
Holden in Blood Meridian uses a "spectacular" rhetoric that influences his followers' decisions. Allegory is&#xD;
also a theoretical link which permits a common reading of authors that would otherwise seem too distant&#xD;
in themes and styles. This is particularly important in the case of Cormac McCarthy who writes historical&#xD;
novels,  never making clear references to the world of mass media. Through an allegorical reading of his&#xD;
novels one can include him in a postmodernist "tradition" characterized by a constant reflection on what&#xD;
Guy Debord calls "the society of spectacle."&#xD;
The main objective of this research project is that of defining new approaches to postmodern&#xD;
American literature,  by underlining some crucial aspects which are believed essential to the understanding&#xD;
of this literary tradition. First of all the thesis differentiates two generations of American postmodernist&#xD;
writers: a "traditional" one,  which includes authors like Pynchon,  DeLillo,  but also Philip Roth and Cormac&#xD;
McCarthy; and a contemporary one,  that uses postmodern narrative techniques with different scopes: that&#xD;
of David Foster Wallace,  Jonathan Franzen,  Dave Eggers. The book concentrates exclusively on the first of&#xD;
these two generations and recognizes,  in the works of Pynchon,  DeLillo,  and McCarthy,  a unique common&#xD;
subject: America,  as the country of Baudrillard's Simulacra and the society of spectacle par excellence. This&#xD;
generation of writers (all were born in the 30's) made of television and other visual media the core of their&#xD;
novels,  and narrated the way in which images and their rhetoric interacted with American society. Using&#xD;
American postmodern literature as a mirror to penetrate and understand mass media spectacles,  and to&#xD;
recognize the technological structures by which they are molded,  is a way to open a new perspective in the&#xD;
analysis of mass media's influence over American society during the second half of twentieth century and&#xD;
up to the present time. In this way the thesis also tries to contribute in the building of a theoretical&#xD;
apparatus the would completely re-shape and re-invent the study of postmodernism in literature.&#xD;
A lot has been written and said on the role of mass media,  images,  and movies in postmodern&#xD;
American literature. Many essays about the subject have been written on singular authors,  together with&#xD;
some comparative studies,  but it has never been produced a comprehensive analytical work that would&#xD;
encompass this different contributions and move toward a re-definition of the link between mass media&#xD;
and American literature in the twentieth century. Nobody,  moreover,  has ever worked on including Cormac&#xD;
McCarthy in this postmodern tradition described above,  which is another important objective of the&#xD;
research. This research project would also help to reconstruct a different approach on media studies,  using&#xD;
literature as a tool to comprehend society and the technologies that mold it. Mass media are not isolated&#xD;
from other narrative forms,  and so is contemporary literature. It is important to see how they relate with&#xD;
each other and what they can say about each other.&#xD;
The allegorical reading of the texts which characterizes the method of analysis in the research&#xD;
project,  is a crucial characteristic of the thesis. It has been already pointed out by many critics (Hutcheon, &#xD;
Madsen,  Huyssens) that all the attempts to define postmodernist fiction within the dichotomy&#xD;
realism/experimentalism have exhausted their analytic potential. It is therefore necessary to rethink&#xD;
postmodern literature in terms of its innate and self-conscious awareness of the arbitrary nature of&#xD;
language. All the works that are analyzed in the thesis exhibit a sustained allegoric structure,  especially&#xD;
when one thinks of allegory as a process of interpretation that mediates between the individual&#xD;
consciousness and culture. This becomes particularly evident in a reading of the novels as allegories of the&#xD;
relationship between the individual and the overwhelming power of mass media. This method of analysis&#xD;
helps also to configure historically postmodernism within the American tradition,  whereas that tradition, &#xD;
since its origins (Hawthorne,  Melville),  always had a strong allegorical character,  which differentiated it&#xD;
from other literary traditions of the nineteenth century.&lt;/Abstract&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2009 22:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/2307/499</guid>
      <dc:date>2009-05-11T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
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