With works ranging thematically and stylis tically from The Universal Baseball Association to The Public Burning, from Pricksongs and Descants to Spanking the Maid, Robert Coover emerges as one of the most vibrant writers from a remarkable avant-garde that in the mid -1960s mounted serious assault on traditional ideas of form and content in world literature. Lois Gordon here defines Coover's novels, short stories, and plays in terms of his con temporaries: among Americans, Donald Bar thelme, William Gass, John ...
Read More
With works ranging thematically and stylis tically from The Universal Baseball Association to The Public Burning, from Pricksongs and Descants to Spanking the Maid, Robert Coover emerges as one of the most vibrant writers from a remarkable avant-garde that in the mid -1960s mounted serious assault on traditional ideas of form and content in world literature. Lois Gordon here defines Coover's novels, short stories, and plays in terms of his con temporaries: among Americans, Donald Bar thelme, William Gass, John Hawkes, and others; among Europeans, Julio Cortazar, Robert Pinget, and Italo Calvino, to name a few. These writers dismiss the conventions of traditional form--linear plot, character development, definable theme, Aristotle's unities of time and space--as no longer ap propriate in the modern world. Coover writes in a dazzling variety of forms and styles; in each he demonstrates a diversity of the style and manipulates the trappings of every conventional form--from Old Comedy to theater of the absurd. He also translates or transposes techniques associated with other art forms, such as film montage or operatic interlude. In Coover's hands, any of these forms are fair game for parody. Gordon notes: "Coover's method, more specifically is this: at the same time that he maintains a strong narrative line he coun terpoints it (his musical term is 'descants') with numerous mythic, legendary, or sym bolic levels... which serve to explode any final meaning or resting point." Nothing is static--personality, event, human values. Coover writes about a continual flux in which everything is constantly qualified and dramatically altered. He portrays the public and private rituals that man construes "to barter inner and outer disorder."
Read Less
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
GORDON, Lois. ROBERT COOVER: THE UNIVERSAL FICTIONMAKING PROCESS. Carbondale, Ill. : Southern Illinois University Press, 1983. 8vo., boards in dust jacket. First Edition. Signed presentation by Gordon on the title page to a noted author-educator: "For Lillian Feder with every best wish, Lois Gordon." Fine; short tears moderate edgewear with some rubbing d/j. $30.00.