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This is a collection of original, stimulating interpretations of key texts by Don DeLillo, designed for students and edited and written by leading scholars in the field.
This is a beautifully coherent collection of essays on DeLillo's three most important recent novels. It is also much more than that. The volume reflects on, tells us much about, and revises views of, DeLillo's entire oeuvre, American literature and culture broadly, modernist and postmodernist theory, and the other arts (including photography, performance art, film). Anyone with any interest in contemporary culture should know this book. Led by the level-setting eloquent and erudite Olster, the contributors comprise the most exciting scholars in American literary and cultural studies today. Fittingly for a volume on DeLillo, reading it you will never forget that these are people who can write. J.D. Prosser, Reader in Humanities, School of English, University of Leeds, UK
Introduction: Don DeLillo and the Dream Release Stacey Olster PART I: Mao II Introduction 1. Delphic DeLillo: Mao II and Millennial Dread, David Cowart 2. Mao II, and the New World Order, Peter Knight 3. Mao II and Mixed Media, Laura Barrett PART II: Underworld Introduction 4. Underworld, Memory, and the Recycling of Cold War Narrative, Thomas Hill Schaub 5. Underworld and the Architecture of Urban Space, David L. Pike 6. Underworld, Ethnicity, and Found Object Art: Reason and Revelation, Josephine Gattuso Hendin PART III. Falling Man Introduction 7. Global Horizons in Falling Man, John Carlos Rowe 8. Bodies in Rest and Motion in Falling Man, Linda S. Kauffman Notes on Contributors Further Reading Index
Stacey Olster is Professor of English at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA. She is the author of Reminiscence and Re-Creation in Contemporary American Fiction (1989) and The Trash Phenomenon: Contemporary Literature, Popular Culture, and the Making of the American Century (2003), and the editor of The Cambridge Companion to John Updike (2006). Stacey Olster is Professor of English at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA.