Elsewhere, I have tried to argue that quotations, like statistics, can easily be extracted to muster evidence for whatever "coherence," "logic," or "position" their manipulator wants to find anyway. A possible counter-position to this is explored in this paper. I try to show a critical reading of a fictional work can be constructed from passages which have been selected not on the basis of their support for a particular preconstructed argument but on random, or at least thematically unmotivated grounds. At the risk of self-defeat, to cite Gravity's rainbow itself now: the "debate" between Mexico and Pointsman (89-91), assuming we side with the former, the text's own clear favourite, would support a probabilistic reading over one founded on ...
Plausibility is often defined in direct contrast with probability. A common stance is that plausibil...
An analysis of the reconfiguration of paranoia as a Marcusian concept in the novel ´´Gravity´s Rainb...
In order for true beliefs acquired from reading fiction to count as knowledge proper, they must surv...
It is not always easy to understand ideas that are statistical or probabilistic in character. It is ...
This paper is an investigation into the way that paranoia is represented in Thomas Pynchon's novel G...
Gravity\u27s Rainbow is a notoriously unreliable text. The perspectives of the strange narrator and ...
We experimentally investigated the influence of context-based biases, such as prestige and popularit...
This intertextual analysis discusses the multimodal links between Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pyncho...
Thomas Pynchon\u27s The Crying of Lot 49 isolates the paradox that its protagonist, Oedipa Maas, is ...
The purpose of my research into Thomas Pynchon\u27s use of ideas from science and philosophy is to s...
Abstract: Manipulation of quotation is shown to be a common argu-mentation tactic in this paper, but...
The availability of computing devices and the proliferation of electronic texts (the so-called 'e-te...
Gravity\u27s Rainbow is a text that refuses to cooperate in its own interpretation, denying the crit...
Two major types of quotation theories can be distinguished according as they regard marks of quotati...
The article presents statistical evidence for the claim that the distribution of humor in Oscar Wild...
Plausibility is often defined in direct contrast with probability. A common stance is that plausibil...
An analysis of the reconfiguration of paranoia as a Marcusian concept in the novel ´´Gravity´s Rainb...
In order for true beliefs acquired from reading fiction to count as knowledge proper, they must surv...
It is not always easy to understand ideas that are statistical or probabilistic in character. It is ...
This paper is an investigation into the way that paranoia is represented in Thomas Pynchon's novel G...
Gravity\u27s Rainbow is a notoriously unreliable text. The perspectives of the strange narrator and ...
We experimentally investigated the influence of context-based biases, such as prestige and popularit...
This intertextual analysis discusses the multimodal links between Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pyncho...
Thomas Pynchon\u27s The Crying of Lot 49 isolates the paradox that its protagonist, Oedipa Maas, is ...
The purpose of my research into Thomas Pynchon\u27s use of ideas from science and philosophy is to s...
Abstract: Manipulation of quotation is shown to be a common argu-mentation tactic in this paper, but...
The availability of computing devices and the proliferation of electronic texts (the so-called 'e-te...
Gravity\u27s Rainbow is a text that refuses to cooperate in its own interpretation, denying the crit...
Two major types of quotation theories can be distinguished according as they regard marks of quotati...
The article presents statistical evidence for the claim that the distribution of humor in Oscar Wild...
Plausibility is often defined in direct contrast with probability. A common stance is that plausibil...
An analysis of the reconfiguration of paranoia as a Marcusian concept in the novel ´´Gravity´s Rainb...
In order for true beliefs acquired from reading fiction to count as knowledge proper, they must surv...