William T. Vollmann: A Critical Companion

William T. Vollmann: A Critical Companion

by Georg Bauer (Contributor), Georg Bauer (Contributor), Christopher K. Coffman (Editor), Daniel Lukes (Editor), Daniel Lukes (Editor)

Synopsis

The essays in this collection make a case for regarding William T. Vollmann as the most ambitious, productive, and important living author in the US. His oeuvre not only includes outstanding work in numerous literary genres, but also global reportage, ethical treatises, paintings, photographs, and many other productions. His reputation as a daring traveler and his fascination with life on the margins have earned him an extra-literary renown unequaled in our time. Perhaps most importantly, his work is exceptional in relation to the literary moment. Vollmann is a member of a group of authors who are responding to the skeptical ironies of postmodernism with a reinvigoration of fiction's affective possibilities and moral sensibilities, but he stands out even among this cohort for his prioritization of moral engagement, historical awareness, and geopolitical scope. Included in this book in addition to twelve scholarly critical essays are reflections on Vollmann by many of his peers, confidantes, and collaborators, including Jonathan Franzen, James Franco, and Michael Glawogger. With a preface by Larry McCaffery and an afterword by Michael Hemmingson, this book offers readings of most of Vollmann's works, includes the first critical engagements with several key titles, and introduces a range of voices from international Vollmann scholarship.

$59.00

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Published: 15 Jul 2016

ISBN 10: 1611495253
ISBN 13: 9781611495256

Media Reviews
Readers need a companion to sift through his [Vollmann's] range of materials and its relationship to style. . . .This critical companion is significant for a number of reasons. First, it makes the world a little less lonesome. Readers of Vollmann now have a book that can be found in the library that will offer them the silent conversation of academic discourse. Too often the academic world is purely professional, but for many it can be a place to connect with other likeminded individuals. This book is the starting point for learning and relationships, to say nothing of careers. Second, this book will help readers form a more nuanced understanding of Vollmann's work, to look beyond superficial understandings of his public persona and to instead gaze deeply into the man and his work. * Hysterical Realism *
William T. Vollmann is the elephant in the room of contemporary American letters, and in this imaginatively organized and edited collection over a dozen academic experts and a few fans and collaborators lay hold of various parts of this literary elephant and describe for us what they've found: Vollmann as participant observer, as moral philosopher, as historical novelist, as photographer, as punk; Vollmann and space, and postcolonialism, and sex work, and the archive. Unlike the blind men in the parable, however, they recognize that Vollmann is bigger than the sum of his many parts. A uniquely valuable collection of essays on a writer who deserves and repays all the attention we can give him. -- Brian McHale, Distinguished Arts and Humanities Professor at The Ohio State University, Author of Postmodernist Fiction (1987) and The Cambridge Introduction to Postmodernism (2015)
This is a fascinating collection of essays and observations about Vollmann's work and Vollmann the human. It's passionate, wildly eclectic, brilliant and frequently strange -- all the things a book about Vollmann should be. -- Dave Eggers, Publisher, Rising Up and Rising Down
Author Bio
Christopher K. Coffman is a lecturer in humanities at Boston University. Daniel Lukes has a PhD in comparative literature from New York University.