《諾納德·蘇克尼克作品的后現(xiàn)代敘事研究》是從一個(gè)全新的視角評(píng)釋蘇克尼克和他的小說(shuō),指出他在上世紀(jì)60年代美國(guó)小說(shuō)危機(jī)和身份危機(jī)雙重困境中努力進(jìn)行敘事改革,采用生存法則、“熵”的法則和鑲嵌法則來(lái)應(yīng)對(duì),從而深入揭示這位不平凡的小說(shuō)家、文論家、批評(píng)家、編輯、出版商和教育家對(duì)美國(guó)文學(xué)的重要貢獻(xiàn)。這不但有助于讀者們進(jìn)一步了解蘇克尼克其人其作,尤其是他小說(shuō)中身份的后現(xiàn)代敘事,而且可以令人理解作為一個(gè)猶太作家,蘇克尼克在美國(guó)文學(xué)危機(jī)的年代里對(duì)后現(xiàn)代派小說(shuō)的產(chǎn)生和發(fā)展所發(fā)揮的巨大作用。
Chapter 1 Introduction
1.1 A Mosaic Man of Literature: Ronald Sukenick and His Literary Career
1.2 Ronald Sukenick Studies in the United States and China
1.3 The Aim and Structure of This Book
Chapter 2 Identity and Identity Study in the Postmodern Context
2.1 Identity: From Modernism to Postmodernism
2.1.1 Definition of Identity
2.1.2 Identity in Modern Context
2.1.3 Identity in Postmodern Context
2.2 Identity in Postmodernist Narratives
2.2.1 Identity in Narratives
2.2.2 Identity in Postmodernist Narratives
Chapter 3 Surviving Law:Assimilation or Dissimilation
3.1 Surviving Law of Identity in Up and Down and In : Life in the Underground
3.1.1 Surviving Law of Identity I : Assimilating into American Mainstream
3.1.2 Surviving Law of Identity II : Dissimilating into American Mainstream
3.1.3 Mainstream and Anti-mainstream: Struggling between Assimilation and Dissimilation
3.2 Surviving Law of Postmodernist Narratives
3.2.1 Death of the Novel
3.2.2 The Survival of the Novel: Narrative Innovations
Chapter 4 Entropy Law:Fluidity and Dissolution
4.1 Entropy Law of Identity in Out and 98.6
4.1.1 Stream of Identities
4.1.2 Non-identity
4.2 Entropy Law of Postmodernist Narratives
4.2.1 Typographic innovations
4.2.2 Language Play
Chapter 5 Mosaic Law:Fragmentation and Collage
5.1 Mosaic Law of Identity in 98.6 and Mosaic Man
5.1.1 Cultural Shards and Hybridity
5.1.2 Psychosynthesis vs. Psychoanalysis
5.2 Mosaic Law of Postmodernist Narratives
5.2.1 Patchwork
5.2.2 Collage
Chapter 6 Conclusion
References
3.2.2 The Survival of the Novel: Narrative Innovations
Under the pressure of survival, fiction is forced to change. The crises of fiction offer great opportunities for fiction innovation, as Suke'nick believes, "if everything is impossible, then anything becomes possible" (Sukenick 2003:8). As we are in a time when all the "paradigms" of fiction are called into question, in consequence we begin to see the development of a poetics of fiction. John Barth, after declaring "the exhaustion of the literature", also realizes that when the conventions and constraints of discourse fall apart, it is also a time for "the literature replenishment" (65-71).
So for the survival of fiction, a group of novelists indulge themselves in a tireless practice of experimental writing. That is what Klinkowitz identifies as a disruptive tendency in American fiction in the 1960s. Such writers as William Burroughs, William Gaddis, John Barth, Thomas Pynchon, Kurt Vonnegut, Donald Barthelme, Ronald Sukenick, Ishmael Reed, Steve Katz, Clarence Majors, Walter Abish and Robert Coover experiment in different ways to challenge the grand narrative of modernism. William Burroughs in his novel Naked Lunch uses fragmentary to replace central narrative arc and employs pastiche to fold in elements from popular genres such as detective fiction and science fiction. Thomas Pynchon in particular provides prime examples of playfulness, often including silly wordplay within a serious context. Intertextuality is another feature displayed in works by Margaret Atwood, Donald Barthelme, John Barth and Robert Coover. Kurt Vonnegut in his novel Slaughterhouse-Five interplays popular science fiction with wartime reportage.
In summary, the new styles of narratives possess the characteristics of disjunction, simultaneity, indeterminacy, irrationalism, anti-illusionism, self-reflexiveness, exagger- ated structural patterning, the absence of plot, literary parodies, temporal and spatial dislocations, blurred boundaries of discourse and pastiche, which later are put into the broad category of postmodernism.
Ronald Sukenick, after realizing the crises of fiction, starts his narrative innovation from his first novel Up. To him, what an innovative novelist first should do is to deconstruct the conventions of traditional novels. Sukenick points out that "one of the main purposes of really good writing is to destroy other really good writing, to destroy all the old concepts and formulas that come out of the best of the past. You should destroy them lovingly and with great consciousness and awareness of them, but always with the end in mind of getting beyond them again" (qtd. LeClair and McCaffery 1974:282). The title of his most important theoretical essay collection In Form : Digressions on the Act o f Fiction shows his effort to digress from the established and set road of fiction. In this collection, such essays as "Twelve Digressions Toward a Study of Composition", "Thirteen Digressions", "Fiction in the Seventies: Ten Digressions on Ten Digressions", "Eight Digressions on the Politics of the Language", "Nine Digressions on Narrative Authority", "Film Digression" and "The Finnegan Digression" present his unremitting efforts in breaking through the constraints of almost every aspect of fiction writing. In doing so, he intends to open up a new space. "It's like cutting a log in a new direction: a new grain opens up, literally a new content appears when you cut something in a new way from the way it usually gets cut. You see different things; words then begin to surrender their meanings in different ways and begin to reveal all that huge amount of accumulated wisdom that language contains from the whole history of the culture" (qtd. LeClair and McCaffery 1974:283).
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