Apocalyptic literature in its secular form is a rich way of depicting a more meaningful fiction about ateleological end. The aim of postmodern apocalyptic literature is to manifest how the need for structure inspiresthe writers of this genre to use it as a sense-making device in postmodern era. This paper is an analysis ofpostmodern apocalyptic literary concepts in Richard Don DeLillos’ White Noise (1985). The novel represents asense of apocalypticism in a nuclear age when the fear of an atomic ending is not likely to vanish. The presentpaper examines the author’s depiction of the presence of an apocalyptic world in the postmodern setting of theselected text. It also explores the concept of postmodern apocalyptic deity and its imperfect jud...
grantor: University of TorontoDon DeLillo distills common premises about the postmodern er...
Human existence has always been in close proximity of pandemics that may have a tendency to wipe the...
This interdisciplinary collection of essays focuses on critical and theoretical responses to the apo...
Apocalyptic literature in its secular form is a rich way of depicting a more meaningful fiction abou...
Postmodern Apocalypse is considered as a strategy a writer employs to depict the dreadfulness of nuc...
The tale of the apocalypse is considered a current subject of debate that has captivated the attenti...
ABSTRACT. This paper discusses how key American writers take the tragic narrative beyond personal di...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 84-86).This project began out of curiosity about why our cul...
This article examines the changing representation of technology in three of DeLillo’s novels, White...
Textual genre criticism and close readings of novels and films reveal that, in addition to chronicli...
2011 Spring.Includes bibliographical references.This thesis considers the ideological representation...
Throughout his writing, Don DeLillo has demonstrated a proclivity for thinking about the end. This s...
Key words: consumerism, human identity, postmodern, White Noise, Don DeLillo ABSTRACT DeLillo’s st...
In 1974, the board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists created the Doomsday clock, using the im...
This dissertation studies narratives of societal collapse in the late twentieth century by situating...
grantor: University of TorontoDon DeLillo distills common premises about the postmodern er...
Human existence has always been in close proximity of pandemics that may have a tendency to wipe the...
This interdisciplinary collection of essays focuses on critical and theoretical responses to the apo...
Apocalyptic literature in its secular form is a rich way of depicting a more meaningful fiction abou...
Postmodern Apocalypse is considered as a strategy a writer employs to depict the dreadfulness of nuc...
The tale of the apocalypse is considered a current subject of debate that has captivated the attenti...
ABSTRACT. This paper discusses how key American writers take the tragic narrative beyond personal di...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 84-86).This project began out of curiosity about why our cul...
This article examines the changing representation of technology in three of DeLillo’s novels, White...
Textual genre criticism and close readings of novels and films reveal that, in addition to chronicli...
2011 Spring.Includes bibliographical references.This thesis considers the ideological representation...
Throughout his writing, Don DeLillo has demonstrated a proclivity for thinking about the end. This s...
Key words: consumerism, human identity, postmodern, White Noise, Don DeLillo ABSTRACT DeLillo’s st...
In 1974, the board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists created the Doomsday clock, using the im...
This dissertation studies narratives of societal collapse in the late twentieth century by situating...
grantor: University of TorontoDon DeLillo distills common premises about the postmodern er...
Human existence has always been in close proximity of pandemics that may have a tendency to wipe the...
This interdisciplinary collection of essays focuses on critical and theoretical responses to the apo...