This essay turns to Don DeLillo’s novel Point Omega to revisit a blind spot of narrative theory—narrative’s relation with lyricality and poeticity. Responding to recent debates on this topic by shifting the emphasis toward modes of reception and readerly engagement, my essay examines how the novel’s experimental mix of literary forms changes the game of what narrative commonly does. Point Omega’s unusual brevity (it is the shortest of DeLillo’s recent short novels) and eventlessness (nothing much happens, and much of what happens evades reconstruction) are key to this operation. I argue that the novel endorses lyric and poetic strategies—among them slowing down the reading process by amplifying the demand for speakerly appropriation, and sp...
The twenty-first century has seen a transformation of twentieth-century narrative and historical dis...
This essay proposes an interpretation of Don DeLillo's Falling Man based on a combination of textual...
This article develops a reading of Don DeLillo’s novel Cosmopolis that differentiates between two th...
This essay turns to Don DeLillo’s novel Point Omega to revisit a blind spot of narrative theory—narr...
This essay turns to Don DeLillo’s novel Point Omega to revisit a blind spot of narrative theory—narr...
It is diffcult to provide an insightful overview of Don DeLillo’s fction without commenting upon the...
The experience of film has acquired a kind of independent existence in our consciousness, it's that ...
In his novel Mao II, Don DeLillo lets his protagonist say, 'Years ago I used to think it was possibl...
The present paper is an enquiry into the issue of characterization in some of Don DeLillo’s most pro...
This article analyzes Don DeLillo’s narrative in terms of the artistic ethics built into it in conne...
Throughout his writing, Don DeLillo has demonstrated a proclivity for thinking about the end. This s...
There seems to be two plots at work within the pages of Don DeLillo’s White Noise: one plot that con...
Resisting the current fashion of calling everything, and ourselves as scholars, “post- ” something, ...
This article outlines a systematic theory of style that aims to combine “social formalism” with narr...
This article examines the changing representation of technology in three of DeLillo’s novels, White...
The twenty-first century has seen a transformation of twentieth-century narrative and historical dis...
This essay proposes an interpretation of Don DeLillo's Falling Man based on a combination of textual...
This article develops a reading of Don DeLillo’s novel Cosmopolis that differentiates between two th...
This essay turns to Don DeLillo’s novel Point Omega to revisit a blind spot of narrative theory—narr...
This essay turns to Don DeLillo’s novel Point Omega to revisit a blind spot of narrative theory—narr...
It is diffcult to provide an insightful overview of Don DeLillo’s fction without commenting upon the...
The experience of film has acquired a kind of independent existence in our consciousness, it's that ...
In his novel Mao II, Don DeLillo lets his protagonist say, 'Years ago I used to think it was possibl...
The present paper is an enquiry into the issue of characterization in some of Don DeLillo’s most pro...
This article analyzes Don DeLillo’s narrative in terms of the artistic ethics built into it in conne...
Throughout his writing, Don DeLillo has demonstrated a proclivity for thinking about the end. This s...
There seems to be two plots at work within the pages of Don DeLillo’s White Noise: one plot that con...
Resisting the current fashion of calling everything, and ourselves as scholars, “post- ” something, ...
This article outlines a systematic theory of style that aims to combine “social formalism” with narr...
This article examines the changing representation of technology in three of DeLillo’s novels, White...
The twenty-first century has seen a transformation of twentieth-century narrative and historical dis...
This essay proposes an interpretation of Don DeLillo's Falling Man based on a combination of textual...
This article develops a reading of Don DeLillo’s novel Cosmopolis that differentiates between two th...