Dewey focuses on seven novels that touch the variety of generic experiments and postures of the post-World War 11 American novel. These novels by Vonnegut, Coover, Percy, Pynchon, Gaddis, and DeLillo represent a significant argument concerning the American literary response to living within the oppressive technologies of the Nuclear Age. Departing from other studies that veer toward speculative fiction or toward the more narrowly defined religious angles, In a Dark Time defines the apocalyptic temper as a most traditional literary genre that articulates the anxieties of a community in crisis, a way for that community to respond to the perception of a history gone critical by turning squarely to that history and to find, in that gesture, the way toward a genuine hope.
Author(s): Joseph Dewey
Publisher: Purdue Research Foundation
Year: 1990
Language: English
Pages: 280(239)
City: West Lafayette, IN
Acknowledgements
Introduction - The Shatterer of Worlds: The Apocalyptic Temper in the American Tradition
1. The Gladder You Will Be to Stand the Pain: The Failure of the Apocalyptic Temper in Kurt Vonnegut
2. An Exemplary Setting Down in to the Self: Robert Coover's 'The Origin of the Brunists'
3. With Sunlight in Their Eyes: Sinners and Saints, Apocalyptics and Prophets in 'Love in the Ruins' and 'The Thanatos Syndrome'
4. Lessons in Love and Silence: 'Gravity's Rainbow' and the Apocalypse in Godel's Universe
5. The Eye Begins to See: The Apocalyptic Temper in the 1980s--William Gaddis and Don DeLillo
Epilogue - The Surer Grip, the Sweeter Berry
Works Cited
Index