From:
Lukas Hoffmann
Postirony
The Nonfictional Literature of David Foster Wallace
and Dave Eggers
October 2016, 210 p., 34,99 €, ISBN 978-3-8376-3661-1
What is ›postirony‹? Foremost, it is a response to the ironic zeitgeist. Moreover, it is
the key to understanding a specific form of literature. The contemporary reader is familiar with and – unfortunately – used to postmodernism’s ironic, self-reflexive metafiction. Authors like David Foster Wallace and Dave Eggers chose a different path:
Despite the reign of contemporary irony, they strive to reach the reader on a level beyond, cognitively as well as emotionally – they claim to be sincere and true. Focusing
largely on nonfiction by said authors, Lukas Hoffmann explores the means the texts
use to achieve something new – namely, a new form of sincerity.
Lukas Hoffmann (PhD) is head of studies and teaches narratology at the Academy of
Performing Arts BW. His research interests include contemporary literature, narrative
ethics, reader-response criticism, and post-theory.
For further information:
www.transcript-verlag.de/978-3-8376-3661-1
© 2016 transcript Verlag, Bielefeld
Contents
Acknowledgements | 8
Introduction | 9
Post-Postmodernism, Postirony, and New Sincerity | 10
Genre Matters | 11
Creative Noniction – Memoir and Autocriticism | 18
New Voices in Contemporary Literature | 21
Dave Eggers – Counter-Cultural Hero and Idealist | 23
David Foster Wallace – Changing the Tone of Contemporary Literature | 25
Jonathan Lethem and Nick Flynn – Postirony’s 2nd Generation | 33
Synopsis | 34
Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea | 37
Richard Rorty – he Liberal Ironist | 42
Linda Hutcheon – Irony’s Edge | 46
David Foster Wallace – How Irony Spread | 47
Irony – An All-Embracing Attitude | 51
Jedediah Purdy – A Return to Traditional Values | 55
Alex Shakar – he Savage Girl | 57
he Postironic – A Philosophical Stand | 59
Reading the Postironic –
Audience, Narrator, and Metalepsis | 65
Audiences – Preliminary houghts | 68
Metalepsis | 69
Audience – Narratee and Narrative Audience | 70
Dave Eggers – Living the Postironic | 89
Meta-Autobiography | 90
Trauma – True Feelings and the Plot | 92
he Nonictional Frame | 95
Struggling With Postmodernism | 100
“I Want to Be Doing Something Beautiful” –
Narrating Dave and Narrated Dave | 105
he Narrated Dave | 110
he Narrating Dave and His Audience | 117
Justifying the Narrative | 120
Concluding AHWOSG | 123
David Foster Wallace – Hope and Despair;
The Postironic Condition | 127
“Author’s Foreword” – Faking Memoir, Talking Truth | 131
he Audience and the Autobiographical | 135
Subjectivity, Veracity, Sincerity | 139
“Author’s Foreword” Part II –
Autocriticism, the Reader, and Postirony | 142
A Supposedly Fun hing I’ll Never Do Again | 148
he Text Within the Text – Critique as Reassurance | 152
he Wallace Style – Footnotes, Asides, and Metaiction | 155
Free Choice vs. Pampered Into Despair | 156
Desperation Cruise | 161
Concluding “Fun hing” | 164
Consider the Lobster | 166
he Audience of the Lobster | 170
Concluding Wallace | 171
A Second Generation Emerges | 175
Nick Flynn – Reenacting Memoir | 175
Jonathan Lethem – Postironic Ecstasy | 185
Conclusion | 191
Identifying the Enemy – Irony’s Reign | 193
he Nonictional Frame | 195
Autobiography – Postironic Idiosyncrasies | 196
Reading Postironic Diferences | 197
Postirony in Autobiography | 198
Postirony in Autocritical Essays | 198
Concluding houghts | 199
Works Cited | 201
What’s engaging and artistically real is, taking it as axiomatic that the
present is grotesquely materialistic, how is it that we as human beings
still have the capacity for joy, charity, genuine connections, for stuff
that doesn’t have a price? And can these capacities be made to thrive?
And if so, how, and if not why not?
David Foster Wallace 1993
Introduction
his book examines the postironic1 movement in contemporary US literature considering mainly two aspects: For one thing, I put my focus on noniction texts
rather than ictional narratives. On the other hand, the “efects” these texts have
on their audience – also a major concern of the authors chosen – are a core feature
of my narratological approach.
A number of scholars has dealt with postironic writings,2 but until now only
ictional narratives have been put under scrutiny. However, many authors who
are labeled postironic in scholarly literature have – besides their otentimes more
acknowledged ictional works – published rather great amounts of noniction. In
numerous cases these noniction narratives, especially the short essayistic works,
are consulted only to highlight the scholarly conclusions about the ictional narratives.3 In contemporary literary criticism there seems to exist a prejudice that dismisses the artistic value of noniction itself, a notion I ind misleading and intend
to overcome in my examination of the postironic syndrome.
In my opinion, the noniction I examine not only shows artistic value but is
also well suited for the particular postironic purposes in itself. Both the neglect in
criticism and the idiosyncratic style of postironic writers demand an investigation
that (1) highlights the literary sophistication and (2) examines the nonictional
peculiarities of these texts.
Postirony’s most urgent characteristic is its attempt to communicate with the
reader instead of presenting her a passive entertainment. Diferent critics,4 most
1 | The Chapter “Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea” will explain and discuss the concept of postirony in detail.
2 | Most prominently Lee Konstantinou, whose doctoral dissertation, numerous articles, and a monography approach postirony. Cp. Konstantinou
(2009b), (2012), and (2016).
3 | Cp. Boswell (2003).
4 | The works of these critics make general suggestions about genres and are
interested in autobiography, a form that is similar to the novel but oftentimes approached differently because of its nonfiction status.
10
Postirony
prominently Phillip Lejeune, proposed that diferent contracts between writer and
reader exist when iction and noniction are at work. In noniction, the reader expects the communicative act to be truthful and to address the world the reader
understands as the real world surrounding herself. While most critics accept this
as deinitional for noniction in general, my focus is set on the actual content and
message that postironic narratives attempt to convey.5
Post-Postmodernism , Postirony,
and
n ew s incerity
Postirony is only one term in use for the group of writers I investigate in this book,
the others being post-postmodernism and new sincerity. However, not one of these
labels seems applicable without causing problems. Nicoline Timmer uses the term
post-postmodernism in her study Do You Feel It Too?: he Post-Postmodern Syndrome in American Fiction at the Turn of the Millennium. (2010) She describes the
authors David Foster Wallace, Dave Eggers, and Mark Danielewski pushing beyond the means of postmodernism and thereby deining a new movement, namely post-postmodernism. Still, post-postmodernism, similar to postmodernism, is
a term far too broad to describe one particular literary movement and therefore
not very satisfying. In contrast, literary scholar Lee Konstantinou attempts to use
“post-postmodernism” along with “postirony” to describe “writers [who] have
sought to create a post-postmodern art that moves beyond or reverses what they
take to be postmodernism’s most damaging qualities” (2009b: 10) and speciies
that
[...] postironists do not replicate the rhetoric of neoconservatives, who often
attack postmodernism for baldly political reasons [but] value the legacy and
accept the theses of their postmodernist forefathers, even as they recognize serious problems with their patrimony […]. (ibid: 10;12)
By this speciication he is scaling down his ield of inquiry from contemporary
writers in general to the group that is associated with Eggers’ McSweeney’s Quaterly. hereby, this group can be sharply deined as
5|
Obviously fictional narratives also transport meaning. The difference is
that although this meaning is – at least in an engaging narrative – also applied by the reader to her own world, the frame of reference is the fictional
world. The reader might see similarities to her own world but is aware that
it is not really her world which is depicted in the narrative. The consequences for the level of engagement will be examined althrough this book.
Introduction
[w]riters [who] try to imagine what shape a postironic consciousness, rather
than an uncritically earnest or naively nostalgic consciousness, might take.
Thus, the declaration of “postirony” often announces the use of ironic and
self-consciously experimental means towards sincere or sentimental ends.
(ibid: 12)
I agree that the announcement of “sincere ends” is central to postironic literature.
For some critics, its centrality leads them to label the group “New Sincerity.”
New Sincerity, a term chosen for example by Adam Kelly to describe these
writers,6 is, in my opinion, the least appropriate term for this group. By skipping
the “post” it does not take into account that the postironists are actively struggling with both postmodernism and irony; a new sincerity could easily dismiss all
of postmodernism’s heritage and write straightforward realism. Nevertheless, the
idea that these writers are “sincere” in their attempt to communicate with the audience is correctly perceived by Kelly and I refer to this idea of the sincere narrative
in my close reading chapters.
Because I see the active struggle with the ironic environment7 as the key concern of the writers I discuss, I believe the term postironic is the most itting one and
will be used in this book. Sometimes statements out of secondary texts use either
post-postmodern or new sincerity; if they do so without a diferent implication to
the one I have ofered, I will not further comment on these terms.
G enre m at ters 8
he common factor of all texts under investigation in this book is their status of
creative noniction. Although diferent in form, they are united under this label. I
follow diferent scholars – David Shields, Bonnie Rough, among others – who propose that categorizing narratives as noniction has a strong inluence on readers’
reactions to these texts.
6 | Critics who use the term “New Sincerity” usually refer to Art Spiegelman
as the origin for this term: “Both Spiegelman and Melamid take credit for
coining the term ‘Neosincerity,’ but everyone agreed that it could also be
called post-irony, if it didn’t sound so highfalutin. They also agreed that
irony has lost its sting. ‘We got immunized against irony,’ Spiegelman said.
‘It makes you shrug. It’s a new way of making you passive.’” (Elliott)
7 | Cp. my discussion of the postironist idea that contemporary societies are
ironic to their core in the chapter “Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea.”
8 | This expression is taken from Couser (2005).
11
12
Postirony
Creative noniction is not a genre in itself, it rather describes an attitude writers have toward their texts. As David Shields, an advocate of creative noniction,
declares:
The books that most interest me sit on a frontier between genres. On one level,
they confront the real world directly; on another level, they mediate and shape
the world, as novels do. The writer is there as a palpable presence on the page,
brooding over his society, daydreaming it into being, working his own brand of
linguistic magic on it. What I want is the real world, with all its hard edges, but
the real world fully imagined and fully written, not merely reported. (Shields
2010: 69)
his interest in the “real world” connects writers of creative noniction, at the same
time, the stylistics of creative noniction are taken from novelistic writing. hereby
creative noniction leaves the level of “report” and enters a level of “the real world
[…] imagined.” his is the distinctive mark to more traditional nonictional accounts. he “frontier between genres” that Shields describes is the imaginative and
subjective rendering of “real world” accounts in a creative way. In order to clarify
his point, Shields refers to writer and literary scholar Bonnie Rough who claims
that
[n]onfiction writers imagine. Fiction writers invent. These are fundamentally
different acts, performed to different ends. Unlike a fiction reader, whose only
task is to imagine, a nonfiction reader is asked to behave more deeply: to imagine, and also to believe. (Rough “Writing Lost Stories” qtd. in Shields 2010: 59
my emphasis)
Rough also includes the reader into her argument because the line between iction
and creative noniction is indeed blurry when one considers narrative style. he
distinction of “imagination” and “invention” that Rough introduces makes, in my
opinion, the actual diference for the reader. As long as the reader feels that “facts”
are imagined, which means they might not have happened exactly as written down
but nevertheless stem from reality, she accepts the claim of noniction. “Invented”
parts of a noniction account, however, put her of – to believe becomes impossible – and consequently, these parts are conceived as lies because they do not have
a referential value to the real world the reader lives in.9 I am mainly interested in
these expectations on the addressee’s side, and my argument follows Rough’s idea
by stating that (postironic) noniction is perceived diferently from (postironic)
iction.
9 | Invention is part of the fictional realm. A reader of fiction actually expects
invention, and fiction without invention is impossible.
Introduction
In contrast to Shields’ and Rough’s general approach, I use a narratological
methodology in order to discuss the text-inherent markers of nonictionality.
Shields’ concept of the “ictionalization of the real” makes the writer’s assumed
“palpable presence on the page” (Shields 2010: 69) a question of narratology. he
writer whom the reader feels present is foremost a narrator and her/his agenda is
a narrator’s, which can best be investigated in narratological terms. On the other
hand, the reader as an extratextual entity is also hardly graspable; therefore I explore the intratextual narratee and the so-called audience text-functions later in
this book.
To return to my thoughts about creative noniction, the creative writing department of the University of Verrmont,10 similar to Shields, deines the “frontier
between genres” as:
Creative nonfiction merges the boundaries between literary art (fiction, poetry)
and research nonfiction (statistical, fact-filled, run of the mill journalism). It is
writing composed of the real, or of facts, that employs the same literary devices
as fiction such as setting, voice/tone, character development, etc. This makes it
different (more “creative”) than standard nonfiction writing. (Tutor Tips)
Although I look at texts varying from self-relexive literary metaiction (Jonathan
Lethem’s “he Ecstasy of Inluence”) to a description of a luxury cruise (David
Foster Wallace’s “A Supposedly Fun hing I’ll Never Do Again”) and also at longer
narratives that deine themselves in their titles as memoirs (Dave Eggers’ A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius: A Memoir and Nick Flynn’s autobiographical
trilogy), they all share a connecting link which is that they are “composed of the
real, or of facts” but nevertheless “[employ] the same literary devices as iction.”
his part is captioned “genre matters” and above I declared that creative noniction is less of a genre and more of an attitude. For the reader, however, it functions as a genre. Rough’s idea that the reader has to “believe” when reading noniction changes the reader’s attitude towards the text. Whereas in iction unreliability
of the narrator and improbability of events is usually accepted by the reader as
literary maneuvers (which, when skillfully used, have outstanding importance
for a text; i.e. the unreliability of the narrator in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita), the
same devices lead to disappointment in literary noniction.11 Although I agree with
Shields’ claim that creative noniction uses literary devices to “imagine rather than
report” facts, these literary devices are diferently scrutinized and evaluated by
readers of noniction compared to readers of iction.
10 | I have randomly chosen the University of Vermont; other creative writing
departments use similar definitions.
11 | Cp. my discussion of James Frey below.
13
14
Postirony
To further clarify the noniction/iction distinction that is important for the
reader’s “belief” in a text, the discussion on autobiography is illuminating.12 he
question of whether autobiography/memoir 13 can be considered a genre in itself is
most prominently asked in Paul de Man’s “Autobiography as De-Facement.” (1979)
herein he states that “[e]mpirically as well as theoretically, autobiography lends itself poorly to generic deinition; each speciic instance seems to be an exception to
the norm; the works themselves always seem to shade of into neighboring or even
incompatible genres […].” (de Man 2007: 265) De Man’s assumption is convincing
when assuming autobiography’s stylistic means. Although Augustine’s Confessions
(usually considered to be the irst autobiography) were already written in the year
399, a widespread useage of generic autobiographical modes was only established
in the 18th century, occurring simultaneously with the proliferation of the novel.
Early novels (i.e. Robinson Crusoe (1719), Tristram Shandy (1759)) used the plotline
(confessional novel, bildungsroman, etc.) that is predestined for autobiographical
writings and otentimes pretended to be real accounts.14 As Shields states:
Early novelists felt the need to foreground their work with a false realistic front.
Defoe tried to pass off Journal of a Plague Year as an actual journal. Fielding
presented Jonathan Wild as a “real” account. As the novel evolved, it left these
techniques behind. (Shields 2010: 13)
12 | That I confine the discussion here to autobiography/memoir is due to the
fact of a lack of critical literature concerning creative nonfiction in general. However, the problems and questions discussed here are strongly
connected to all forms of literary nonfiction.
13 | Initially the terms memoir and autobiography were used for different writings. Whereas narratives concerned with the whole life of its author were
labeled autobiography, narratives that combined a historical event with
the corresponding lifespan of its author were called memoirs. Nowadays
the terms are equivalents. Smith and Watson ascribe this to practices in
the book industry: “Predating the term autobiography, memoir is now the
word used by publishing houses to describe various practices and genres of
self life writing. […] Both memoir and autobiography are encompassed in
the term life writing.” (Smith and Watson 2010: 4 original emphasis) I use
both terms as synonyms in this book. Later I also look at the specific form
of “autocriticism.”
14 | “[...] in the West, memoir developed in tandem with the novel, in English,
at least, the two genres have enjoyed a symbiotic relationship for some two
hundred years. And they remain intertwined. Today memoirs often incorporate invented or enhanced material, and they often use novelistic techniques.” (Couser 2011: 15)
Introduction
Consequently, the ways autobiography presents itself in are similar to the novel.15
Nevertheless, de Man’s assumption that autobiography is not distinguishable from
ictional narratives cannot be applied to the actual reading experience. he reader
of autobiography deals with that genre diferently than she does with reading a
ictional novel.
While it is diicult to measure the “positive” engagement of a reader in a memoir, the public outburst when a hoax is exposed shows that readers feel deceived in
a personal manner. As for example Wallace puts it:
The feeling of betrayal or infidelity that the reader suffers if it turns out that a
piece of ostensible nonfiction has made up stuff in it […] is because the terms
of the nonfiction contract have been violated. There are, of course, ways to
quote-unquote cheat the reader in fiction, too, but these tend to be more technical, meaning internal to the story’s own formal rules […] the reader tends to feel
more aesthetically disappointed than personally dicked over. (Wallace 2011: 73)
Truthfulness is the primary and foremost expectation the reader has when engaging with a noniction text. While inconsistencies in a novel are mostly read as
literary failures, the reader takes exaggerations, half-truths, and straightforwardly
told lies as a personal afront in a memoir. Most contemporary readers are aware
that life writing is just as subjective as any other account given by human beings.
hat memory might fail, that the past is seen diferently in retrospect, that a narrator’s judgment might be inluenced by personal relations, prejudices, or the cultural background are aspects of life writing which the reader is aware of. However,
when she feels cheated by a factual narrative, it loses its face value. his face value,
however, is not inherent in the genre or the particular text but in the reader’s expectations:
When Frey, […] Wilkomirski, et al. wrote their books, of course they made
things up. Who doesn’t? […] I don’t want to defend Frey per se – he’s a terrible
writer – but the very nearly pornographic obsession with his and similar cases
reveals the degree of nervousness on the topic. The huge loud roar, as it returns
again and again, has to do with the culture being embarrassed at how much it
wants the frame of reality and, within that frame, great drama. (Shields 2010:
35)
15 | Notable exceptions are lyrical autobiographies William Wordsworth’s The
Prelude or, Growth of a Poet’s Mind; An Autobiographical Poem (1850).
15
16
Postirony
he contemporary reader 16 allows forms of ictionalization in creative noniction;
dramatization is necessary to fulill the reader’s urge for drama.17 At the same
time she feels an “embarrassement” about her own voyeuristic demand. his puts
writers in a diicult spot, because it is a ine line between “imagining facts” and
thereby overcoming a mere “report” and making up facts. he texts I investigate in
this book all explicitly discuss this problem in metaictional asides and comments.
hey self-relexively show their awareness of the problem of factual narration.
Returning to the question of genre, to label certain texts “creative noniction”
[...] is not the end of genre analysis but its starting point. The goal is not to
classify works but to clarify them. We can’t fully understand what a particular
[...] story is doing without some sense of the operative conventions, which are
a function of its genre. Especially in life writing, then, genre is not about mere
literary form; it’s about force – what a narrative’s purpose is, what impact it
seeks to have on the world. (Couser 2011: 9 original emphasis)
Whereas in postironic writings the “narrative’s purpose” is similar in ictional and
nonictional narratives, the reader’s familiarity with literary/genre conventions
makes this purpose in noniction more obvious and the “impact it seeks to have on
the world” more explicit. he perpetual inclusion of generic distinctions is therefore indispensable. Ann Jeferson thinks along similar lines when she assumes that
it is necessary
to presuppose that there are generic distinctions between novels and autobiographies, even while fiction is being revealed as autobiographical and the autobiographies as fictional, since in this sphere (if not in all others) generic differences need to be respected as an effect of reading, even if they cannot be defined as
intrinsic qualities of the texts in question. (1990: 109 my emphasis)
As stated above, the “efects of reading” are a core feature of my examinations.
herefore, it is important to highlight that I understand postironic creative noniction as highly autobiographical and that “[a]utobiography is [...] considered here
16 | “Reader” in this case refers to an ideal reader. I discuss the roles of audiences, narratees and readers in the chapter “Reading th Postironic – Audience, Narrator, and Metalepsis.”
17 | In the close reading chapters I discuss Jean Baudrillard’s concept of “hyperreality” and the resulting problem to distinguish between “reality” and
a form of reality everyone receives from daily television, the internet etc.,
so-called “hyperreality.” Cp. footnote 51 in the chapter “Dave Eggers – Living the Postironic.”
Introduction
as referential art, without denying the complexities involved in that referentiality.”
(Gudmundsdóttir 2003: 3)
Returning to Jeferson’s idea that “[generic distinctions] cannot be deined as
intrinsic qualities of the texts in question” I once more take up the idea that the
reader feels betrayed by autobiographical hoaxes (cp. “he feeling of betrayal or
inidelity that the reader sufers if it turns out that a piece of ostensible noniction
has made up stuf in it.” (Wallace 2011: 73))
A number of texts labeled “autobiography” have been exposed as deceptive
in the last several years. Most prominent are James Frey’s A Million Little Pieces (2003) and Binjamin Wilkomirski’s holocaust-survivor-tale Bruchstücke: Aus
einer Kindheit 1939-1948 (1995). Frey tried to ind a publisher for his book by presenting it as a ictional novel and only pretended to have written a memoir when
it wasn’t accepted – ergo he lied knowingly in order to get a publisher (cp. Couser
2011: 17). he uproar when the fraud became known makes Couser conclude, “this
distinction [between noniction and iction] is not an academic one. Ignoring it
can have signiicant consequences in the real world.” (ibid: 16) In contrast to Frey’s
calculating lie, Wilkomirski actually believes to be a holocaust survivor; he is not
really lying but rather narrating a psychosis. However, proof is given that his real
name is Bruno Dösseker, and that he grew up in Switzerland and had in fact never
been a victim of Nazi persecution,18 so the book is without doubt untrue in its
referential aim.
In the Frey scandal, most probably due to Oprah Winfrey’s involvement, the
public outburst was huge. he book had been recommended by Winfrey in her
“Book Club” and became a national bestseller. When, only a couple of months
later, the website he Smoking Gun published an article entitled “A Million Little
Lies: he Man Who Conned Oprah” and showed that Frey (among other false information) had strongly exaggerated and lied about his time spent in jail and in
a rehabilitation center, a discussion about truthfulness in the book industry and
mass media broke loose. he underlying concept behind appearing on the Oprah
Winfrey Show is to truthfully give an account of one’s former sufering and redemption, and the TV-audience thereby becomes engaged witnesses rather than
just passive consumers (cp. Gilmore 2010: 663-664). he same sort of engagement
can be found in the reading process of a memoir. he reader’s expectation is to
read the truth – though she knows that literary memoirs use literary stylistics and
that no one can really recall a conversation word by word that had happened years
18 | I will not discuss Wilkomirski’s case any further, for this book Frey’s conscious untruthfulness may be more concisely discussed than the medical
implications of Wilkomirski’s account. The fraud was unveiled by Mächler
(2000). Furthermore, an anthology shedding light onto the psychological
side of the case is Diekmann (2002).
17
18
Postirony
before. Nevertheless the reader expects the narrator to tell the truth to the best of
his/her knowledge. Credibility is what is expected of noniction.
My close readings will otentimes bring up this question again – interestingly,
all postironic authors discussed in this book address the inquiry of reliability and
veracity themselves in metaictional passages. Sidonie Smith and Julia Watson call
this employment of autobiographical means in metaictional comments autocriticism.
c reative n onfiction – m emoir
and
autocriticism
Memoir has become the central form of the
culture: not only the way stories are told, but
the way arguments are put forth, products and
properties marketed, ideas floated, acts justified, reputations constructed or salvaged.
(Yagoda 2009: 7)
I have stated that I will examine postironic noniction. Above I generally discussed
distinguishing characteristics of noniction and iction. he speciic texts I discuss
are – as creative noniction – located at the border between iction and noniction.
So far I have not distinguished between the diferent text forms that I will further
explore. Dave Eggers and Nick Flynn published memoirs. his might seem strange
at irst since traditional memoirs are not written by writers in their twenties. However, as the quote above states, “memoir has become the central form of culture,”
and because postironists are occupied with cultural symptoms, the choice to write
memoir at a young age does not seem so strange anymore.
Since the 1960s a memoir boom can be noticed. Bookstores otentimes present
an extra shelf reserved for autobiography, memoir, and biography. hese texts have
in common that they are considered referential or factual, in contrast to ictitious
narratives that would include the autobiographical novel. Why the sales of autobiographical texts have been increasing within the last decades is diicult to explain.
Some scholars believe that the postmodern lack of grand narratives (combined to
a death of the subject)19 makes readers anxious for actual accounts of subjectivity. Others believe that a peeping tom mentality, promoted by television’s “reality”
concepts, makes contemporary readers eager to get insights into others’ lives.20
But why is the contemporary reader more bound to a so-called factual narrative
than to a ictitious one? From its inception the novel’s main goal was to present
19 | A detailed analysis of the concept of the subject in postmodern times can
be found in Heartfield (2002).
20 | Cp. Yagoda (2009).
Introduction
the reader with lifelike characters and track their developments. Insights into an
other’s self are the novel’s speciality (cp. classical examples like Robison Crusoe
or Tristram Shandy), but for some reason contemporary readers seem unsatisied
by these ictional representations. Nevertheless, even though the memoir is oten
considered inferior to the novel in stylistic matters,21 contemporary sales show a
preference of readers for the memoir.22 homas Couser believes that
[...] while memoirs, like novels, traffic in character, plot, conf lict, and suspense,
we tend not to respond to these elements in the same way. The reason is that
novels and memoirs have different statuses. In one way, characters in memoir
are of course authorial creations; we know them only as effects of words on
the page. But at the same time, they are representations of real people, who are
vulnerable to harm. With memoir, too, we become interested in how characters
are formed by real events – or at least how the narrator understands that process
[...]. (Couser 2011: 13 my emphasis)
Couser highlights the aspect of realness in memoir, which I revisit when discussing claims of authenticity in my close readings later in this book. Also addressing
the public interest in autobiographical writings, Gunnthórunn Gudmundsdóttir
adds another notable aspect:
The reason for this interest in life-writing are many and varied, but one important factor is that autobiography – in its various guises – can capture and address
many contemporary concerns, for example the status of the subject [...], and
perhaps most importantly questions the individual’s relationship with the past.
Autobiographical representation can thereby ref lect some of the main preoccupations of postmodernism. (Gudmundsdóttir 2003: 1)
his is of signiicance for postironic autobiography; because these texts not only
address the postmodern zeitgeist on a general level but also speciically criticize
postmodern irony by intertextually including other postmodern narratives. he
autobiographical (resp. nonictional) status lends itself ittingly to this endeavor.
21 | “And yet, pervasive as memoir has become, it is not well understood by the
general public. Unlike fiction, which is taught early and often in American
classrooms right through university, memoir is still treated with relative
neglect, leaving the impression that it needs no explanation.” (Couser 2011:
8)
22 | “Total sales in the categories of Personal Memoirs, Childhood Memoirs,
and Parental Memoirs increased more than 400 percent between 2004 and
2008.” (Yagoda 2009: 7)
19
20
Postirony
In addition to book-length memoirs, contemporary autobiographical studies explore other forms of autobiographical writings. Smith and Watson, in their
detailed study Reading Autobiography: A Guide For Interpreting Life Narratives
(2010), dedicate two chapters to recent criticism of autobiography. hey point at
theories of performativity, relationality, and positionality in order to explain both
contemporary autobiographical narratives and the critical approaches thereto.
hese concepts are connected to broader scientiic approaches: performativity
mainly to gender studies, relationality and positionality to postcolonial studies.
However, Smith and Watson show that all three concepts are useful for a better
understanding of contemporary autobiographies.23 Furthermore, they discuss
the concept of “Autocritical Practices” (cp. Smith and Watson 2010: 229-231). My
chapter discussing Dave Eggers shows that metaictional parts in A Heartbreaking
Work of Staggering Genius are concerned with questions about the autobiographical act in and for itself. Smith and Watson term acts like this “criticism of life
narrative as centrally implicated in its practice” (ibid: 229). Whereas Smith and
Watson chose to take their examples for autocriticism from so-called marginal
literatures – they describe Native American writer Gerald Vizenor and African
American writer Richard Wright – this form of autobiographical narrative is in
no way restricted to one class, ethnicity, or gender. Gerhard Richter, for example,
describes Walter Benjamin’s essays to “[…] ofer an experience of singularity and
transgression in which the history of the self is inseparable from the history of its
culture” (Richter 2000: 33). his statement about Benjamin’s work is just as descriptive and characteristic of Wallace’s and Lethem’s essays.
hus, the concept of “autocriticism” could be described as essayistic noniction that foremost describes the cultural environment of the narrating I. However,
these essays do not stop at depicting the world surrounding the writing subject
but (more or less directly) show the interconnection of this subject with its society, thereby committing an autobiographical act. For example, Wallace’s essay
“Up, Simba” (concerned with John McCain’s 2000 race for candidacy) blatantly
denies objectivity by stating: “[…] it’s just meant to be the truth as one person saw
it” (Wallace 2005c: 157). Furthermore, these narratives show their awareness of
themselves as autobiographical (and subjective even though they are noniction).
herefore, the form of “autocritical” narratives cannot be restricted to a particular
content; autocriticism includes travel narratives, literary- and political criticism,
journalistic accounts, and descriptions of popular cultural icons and phenomena.
By applying the concept of autocriticism to the texts explored in this book, I will
highlight their autobiographical aspects and show how audiences are led to an idiosyncratic reading as a result of these autocritical narratives.
23 | Cp. Smith and Watson (2010: 213-234).
Introduction
n ew voices
in
contemPorary L iterature
Above I already mentioned the writers and texts I am about to investigate in this
book. hey are part of what is labeled contemporary literature, which is otentimes
merely tagged “postmodern,” a concept that should be and has been questioned because of its generalizing efect.24 he term postmodern is – in its broadness not only
used in reference to art but also for various aspects of life – vague and indeinable.
However, taking into account the wide usage in (critical) texts that have to be considered in this book, I would propose to refer to it in the sense Mark Currie does:
We should dispense with the illusion, from the outset, that words like postmodern can be nailed down, even if that means tolerating an oscillation as severe as
this, between a kind of writing and a universal condition […]. (2011: 1)
I will neither try to give a close deinition, nor deal with this problem separately; the discussion of postmodern literature and theory instead will be executed by
close readings and comparisons of texts that are directly connected to my investigations of contemporary postironic literature.
As shown in many explorations of literary movements of the late 20th century,
US literature is far too diverse to be simply labeled postmodern. he distinctive
programmatic features of the diferent movements would thereby be synchronized, which would easily cover and nullify one of contemporary literature’s most
interesting attributes: not to follow one central idea of what contemporary literature is or should be, but to engage in a perpetual (constructive) dispute with literary fashions, ideas, role models, and forebearers.
he scope of this book is not the whole body of diferent literary strands that
established themselves within the last 60 years (roughly the time-span usually considered as postmodern).25 My main interest lies in narratives labeled post-postmodern, postironic, or new sincerity, written by authors born in the 1960s who
started publishing in the 1980s and 1990s, and who are still seen as a young and
contemporary generation of writers. Even though many diferent styles and topics
were chosen by these writers, I agree with David Foster Wallace, who remarks:
“[we] are in my opinion A Generation, conjoined less by chronology […] than by
the new and singular environment in and about which we try to write iction.”
(Wallace 2012: 41) He continues, “[it] goes a long way toward explaining the violent and conlicting critical reactions New Voices are provoking.” (ibid) hese
24 | Cp. Conte (2002) and Hoffmann (2005) among others.
25 | “The prefix post- identifies postmodernism as chronologically subsequent
to modernism [...], thereby placing it in the second half of the twentieth
century [...].” (McHale 2005: 456)
21
22
Postirony
“violent and conlicting reactions” are due to the (difering) extremes addressed in
the works of this Generation.
he irst writers of the group, which Wallace coins the “conspicuously young,”
were Bret Easton Ellis and Jay McInerney, whose debut novels Less han Zero
(1985) and Bright Lights, Big City (1984) put them on the literary map almost overnight. While popular media in the 1980s called them the “literary brat pack,” recent criticism refers to them as the “blank generation.”26 Both labels refer to those
writers’ descriptions of and debates about 1980s materialism, consumerism, and
the decline of non-materialist values – most oten expressed in traditional coming
of age stories. Ater having peaked in the late 1980s, the “blank generation” was
followed by another literary movement, the so-called “generation x.” Whereas Ellis
and McInerney depicted a hollow, MTV-like world of parties, drugs and (violent)
sexuality, writers like Douglass Coupland (whose novel Generation X exemplarily
stands for the whole movement) and ilmmaker Richard Linklater describe a different, changed environment. he end of the Cold War and the disappearance of
the nuclear threat let these artists with a diferent emptiness than their predecessors. Although still being preoccupied with an emptiness and aimlessness similar
to the 1980’s writers, they no longer ind satisfaction in descriptions of drug abuse,
orgies, acts of violence, and frantic consumerism. hese so-called “slackers”27 are
no longer successful brokers (like Patrick Bateman in Ellis’ American Psycho) nor
rich heirs who live a life without ever having to brood about the material basis
of life (like the protagonists in McInerney’s Bright Lights, Big City); they mostly
hold jobs in the media and computer industry and spend their leisure time trying
to be everything but petty bourgeois. his fear of being labeled bourgeois can be
described as the only urge this group actually feels; their lack of motivation in all
other aspects of life earned them the derogative description of being couch potatoes. While the “blank generation” and “generation x” were the most dominant literary fashions among the “conspicuously young” (at least when it comes to media
coverage and sales), writers with a diferent agenda started to publish in the late
1980s as well.
One of these authors, David Foster Wallace, whose debut, Broom of the System,
was published in 1986 and whose inluence – chiely with his 1996 novel Ininite
Jest – on a so far unnamed generation of US writers (among them are Nick Flynn,
Dave Eggers, Jonathan Lethem, and arguably Jonathan Franzen) is immense. As
26 | Particularly in relation to postironic writers, the name “blank generation”
is justifiable, cp. Annesley (1998). Whereas postironic writers usually try
to overcome the consumer culture’s void, most members of the “blank generation” seem to merely describe the cultural situation without an urge to
overcome it. Cp. the discussion of Ellis’ American Psycho in McCaffery
(1993).
27 | The term refers to the 1991 movie Slacker by Richard Linklater.
Introduction
Marshall Boswell claims: “Since Ininite Jest, a whole new group of emerging young
writers has copied the elusive Wallace ‘tone’ […]. he most visible and successful
writer of this group is the young essayist Dave Eggers […].” (Qtd. in Hamilton
2010: 19) I agree with Boswell and will introduce the authors under investigation in
this introduction. To begin with, a clariication of the nonictional status of these
texts is necessary. In the following I analyze Dave Eggers’ A Heartbreaking Work
of Staggering Genius (2000) and Nick Flynn’s three-volume-works, narratives aptly labeled memoir or autobiography. Furthermore, I examine diferent essays by
David Foster Wallace and Jonathan Lethem, which are at irst sight disparate from
Eggers’ and Flynn’s books. My close readings will demonstrate that beneath their
formal and supericial varieties, these essays also include strong autobiographical
features28 and reveal postironic features similar to those found in the more formal
memoirs of Flynn and Eggers.
dave e GGers – counter -cuLturaL H ero
and i deaList
Dave Eggers has to be seen as one of the leading igures in this “group of emerging
young writers.” He exempliies Wallace’s idea of an author who shows
[...] a willingness to disclose [himself], open [himself] up in spiritual and emotional ways that risk making [him] look banal or melodramatic or naive or unhip or sappy, and to ask the reader really to feel something. (McCaffery 1993:
148-149)
A recently published book-length analysis of Eggers’ role in contemporary literature (both as a writer and a publisher), entitled One Man Zeitgeist, accurately
describes the role of Eggers in the literary scene: a publicly acknowledged literary
igure who inluences the mainstream but nevertheless embodies a counterculture
that criticizes everything that might be mainstream. Although he started to be
part of the literary environment by publishing the literary journal McSweeney’s,
he had his real breakthrough when he published his debut, A Heartbreaking Work
of Staggering Genius29 in 2000. Caroline Hamilton sees one of the reasons for its
success in Eggers’s attempt to
[distinguish] himself from the majority of first-time authors by courting publicity while also mocking it. His career and the success of his memoir were both
28 | I therefore label them “autocriticism.” This term is borrowed from autobiographical scholars Sidonie Smith and Julia Watson.
29 | In the following abreviated as AHWOSG.
23
24
Postirony
built on his willingness to acknowledge his desire to be a visible and representative part of literary culture in the United States. (Hamilton 2010: 3)
Eggers incorporated the countercultural ideals of seeing and comprehending art
as a means of connecting to people, while pretending to stand above monetary
interests. However, Hamilton is right in stating that
[t]he figure of the romantic artist standing aloof from the machinations of the
culture industry has enduring appeal but it is of course illusory: the marginality
of literature in mainstream culture is one key reason it generates public attention; disinterest in the market is an author’s selling point. (ibid: 21)
Eggers seems well aware of this “selling point.” His attitude toward being a “real”
artist (prominently stated in McSweeney’s as well as in AHWOSG) falls in line with
Pierre Bourdieu’s idea of cultural capital: “[...] by placing emphasis on creative integrity and appreciation for art that goes beyond monetary value the artist makes
the market appear irrelevant; what matters is cultural capital.” (Qtd. in Hamilton
2010: 21) Eggers is otentimes criticized for merely feigning “the romantic artist.”
Hamilton points out that
[g]iven these successes, it may come as a surprise to learn that Eggers’s also holds
the mantle for being one of the most disliked of contemporary American authors [...]. It is difficult to pinpoint precisely what provokes these reactions, but
the answer lies in part in the fact that, as many critics have observed, Eggers’s
work betrays an unusual, passive-aggressive dislike for his public. (ibid: 5)
his “dislike for his public” that makes him disliked by many readers (and critics) is, paradoxically, what makes him “Dave Eggers: Teen Idol” (ibid: 53) for a
counter-cultural group of readers, who “[...] aligned themselves with what might
be termed an Eggers-advocated lifestyle which they believed marked them out as a
distinct and unique breed of cultural producers and consumers” (ibid). In his roles
as publisher and writer, Eggers is aware of the market’s mechanisms and he uses
them in order to construct an image of himself that “sells” while simultaneously he
never appears to “sell out.” His devoted readers and fans never forget to mention
that he uses part of his proits for a non-proit endeavor that provides free-tutoring
to high school students who come from economically weak backgrounds. For his
supporters, this is proof of his authenticity, his belief in higher values apart from
the mere making-money.
Introduction
Dave Eggers is, to pick up Hamilton’s phrase again, a “One Man Zeitgeist”
whose reputation might even be more important to “a whole new group of emerging young writers” than his actual literary output.30
david f oster waLLace – c HanGinG
contemPorary L iterature
tHe
tone
of
Wallace, similar to the aforementioned Ellis, McInerney, and Coupland, is concerned with the anxieties, despair, all-embracing materialism and consumerism
that is characteristic of contemporary US society; however, in contrast to his contemporaries, his protagonists either try to get an insight into “what it is to be a
fucking human being” (McCafery 1993: 131) or at least scrutinize their role of
being mere passive consumers.
In contrast to Eggers’ extroverted way of trying to change the image of the
contemporary artist, Wallace tries to redeine and thereby give new meaning to
“postmodern” literature purely by means of literary style. Wallace selected two key
concepts he judges as (1) typical for postmodern times and art and (2) oppressive
for a progressive contemporary literature: irony and metaiction.31 Both irony as an
ideology32 and metaiction as its corresponding literary technique are perpetually
present in his books. A full explanation as to why he uses what he condemns would
be too lengthy for this introduction, but in my chapter “Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea” I will ofer a detailed discussion.33 hus, to briely conclude this aspect
at this point, I refer to Lee Konstantinou who asserts that
30 | I will ask this question again in the close reading of AHWOSG and will
elaborate that his work is inf luential and of importance too.
31 | I am aware that the term “metafiction” is not accurate for metatextual
comments in nonfiction. Since the nonfiction I discuss is creative nonfiction and uses literary styles, I nevertheless think that “metafiction,” being
the term in use in literary studies, better describes the meta-comments I
discuss than fabricated terms like “meta-nonfiction” or “meta-fact” could.
32 | Irony is a speech act on the one hand, but also a worldview. Irony is seen
as an oppressive ideology not only by Wallace. As early as in romanticism,
Søren Kierkegaard made this claim. Cp. my discussion on pages 59-61.
Linda Hutcheon states in the introduction to her important study concerning irony that: “Many have written of the shift over time from seeing
irony as a limited classical rhetorical trope to treating it as a vision of life.”
(Hutcheon 1995: 2)
33 | Cp. my discussion of Wallace’s essay “Joseph Frank’s Dostoevsky” on pages
61-64.
25
26
Postirony
[...] we must understand the literary efforts of David Foster Wallace and Dave
Eggers, and the stakes behind a project of discovering or inventing a viable
postironic ethos. Both authors sought, in related ways, to use techniques historically associated with metafiction (1) to generate forms of affect that theory
held to be impossible and (2) to relink private and public life [...] via an ethos of
postironic belief. (2009b: 127)
his postironic ethos is what distinguishes the writers under examination in this
book from their contemporary “conspiciously young” counterparts.
Wallace – Exhausted Literature, Metafiction and Irony
Zadie Smith labeled Wallace one of the authors “who came of age under postmodernity” (Smith 2007: 4). Smith thought about how this afected writers of her generation and relected upon ways for these writers to distinguish themselves from
(traditional) postmodernism. She states that for many contemporary novelists
“[…] aesthetic choices very oten have an ethical dimension” and continues “[…]
you see style as a personal necessity, as the only possible expression of a particular
human consciousness” (ibid my emphasis).34 he expression of this “human consciousness” is, for these writers, their urge to communicate with the reader and
do so in a sincere way. Many critics believe that this particular style established
itself foremost in Wallace’s texts, and only ater Wallace created it was copied by
other writers. As stated above, scholarly works concerned with Wallace emphasize
that his writings are somehow new and cannot merely be seen as a continuation of
postmodern traditions. Boswell’s claim that “[Wallace is] the foremost writer of a
remarkable generation of ambitious new novelists” (qtd. in Hamilton 2010: 17 my
emphasis) has to be further scrutinized. What is exactly “new” about Wallace and
his peers? Just like his postmodern predecessors, many of whom he explicitly calls
inluential,35 he writes highly complex texts. His novel Ininite Jest is not only 1079
pages thick but also includes hundreds of footnotes, an enormous number for a
ictional text.
Wallace’s consistent use of metaiction as a means against irony’s hegemony leads his narrators (and protagonists) to desperate thoughts about their own
humanity and makes them criticize the society surrounding them. hey thereby
debunk wrong hipness, which denies real feelings and therefore prevents an es34 | Wallace’s own ideas about the role of aesthetics for literature are discussed
in the chapter “The Postironic – A Philosophical Stand.”
35 | “[Most critics] failed to invoke such figures as John Barth, Thomas Pynchon, and William Gaddis, all of whom Wallace himself has acknowledged
as formative inf luences.” (Hamilton 2010: 21-22)
Introduction
cape out of the solipsist cage.36 Wallace tries to overcome the dead-end into which
contemporary literature had maneuvered itself as he identiies it in his 1993 essay
“E Unibus Pluram.”37 Tim Jacobs describes Wallace “[…] as a reader’s writer – not
an avant-gardist, theorist, or hipster show-of – probably because he was himself
a lonely reader, abundantly self-conscious and inwardly bent” (2008). “A reader’s
writer,” however, does not mean a writer who produces literature easy to digest.
In Wallace’s (and the other postironist writers’) case, “a reader’s writer” is interested in producing a narrative that makes the reader wonder about herself and
her life in contemporary society. “A reader’s writer” wants to startle the reader by
emphasizing that “[…] the present is grotesquely materialistic [but] we as human
beings still have the capacity for joy, charity, genuine connections, for stuf that
doesn’t have a price […].” (McCafery 1993: 132) his leads to the question of how
literature can connect to the reader on an emotional level that actually leads the
reader to question her own attitude towards her environment. How is it possible
to (1) keep literary developments of the 20th century in mind,38 but (2) avoid the
hollowness Wallace ascribes to the works of (among others) Bret Easton Ellis and
Mark Leyner?39 he elaborate examinations on Eggers and Wallace, and the briefer
looks at Nick Flynn and Jonathan Lethem later in this book, will give answers to
these questions.
In his stories, novels, and essays, Wallace’s awareness of literary fashions of the
past as well as the present run as rampant as his criticism of the same. He includes
philosophical ideas (mostly Wittgenstein’s theory of language), is familiar with
contemporary literary theory (in particular Jacques Derrida), and never fails to include other literary texts of the 20th century.40 Wallace is well aware of his literary
surroundings and especially the development of US literature in the decades since
WW2. His engagement with this heritage leaves him to state that
36 | Most postironic narrators and protagonists appear to be caged in solipsism
and try to overcome this state of being.
37 | I discuss this essay in the chapter “Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea.”
38 | Not only Wallace but for example also the afore mentioned writer David
Shields find it inevitable to apply a self-concious way of writing: “I find it
very nearly impossible to read a contemporary novel that presents itself
unself-consciously as a novel, since it’s not clear to me how such a book
could convey what it feels like to be alive right now.” (Shields 2010: 68)
39 | “[…] Image-Fiction is paradoxically trying to restore what’s taken for ‘real’
to three whole dimensions, to reconstruct a univocally round world out of
disparate streams of f lat sights.” (Wallace 1997a: 22)
40 | Most prominently his intertextual parody of John Barth’s “Lost in the Funhouse” in “Westward the Course of Empire Takes Its Way,” the concluding
piece of the story collection Girl with Curious Hair.
27
28
Postirony
[i]rony and cynicism were just what the U.S. hypocrisy of the fifties and sixties
called for. That’s what made the early postmodernists great artists. [...] Sarcasm, parody, absurdism and irony are great ways to strip off stuff ’s mask and
show the unpleasant reality behind it. The problem is that once the rules for
art are debunked, and once the unpleasant realities the [sic] irony diagnosis
are revealed and diagnosed, then what do we do? Irony’s useful for debunking
illusions, but most of the illusion-debunking in the U.S. has now been done and
redone. (McCaffery 1993: 147 original emphasis)
It is important to note that Wallace does not criticize these writers for what they
have brought to literature; he explicitly states that it has been more than necessary
for members of post WW2 US society to learn about the hypocrisy they lived in.41
he way John Barth, homas Pynchon, or Wiliam Gaddis (among others) used
irony to undermine and criticize what American culture had become liberated
the American (intellectual) mind. However, Wallace describes a shit in the use
of these “illusion-debunking” tools; what had been introduced in serious art to
criticize mainstream society’s hypocrisy was adopted by the mainstream almost
simultaneously.42
he mainstream is foremostly connected to television’s rise in popularity.
Starting in the 1970s, television became the ultimate entertainment for the masses,
and television all too soon started using self-mocking irony and meta-comments.
his insight is of profound importance for Wallace’s understanding of contemporary literature. If a iction writer wants to be more than a mere entertainer – and
Wallace wants his art to be more than entertainment – she/he needs to express
something beyond televisions scope:43 “I just think that iction that isn’t exploring what it means to be human today isn’t good art.” (ibid: 131) he artist has to
ind ways to challenge the reader. his means to call her attention to the idea that
“what’s engaging and artistically real is, taking it as axiomatic that the present is
41 | And in my close reading chapters it will become apparent that Eggers,
Flynn, and Lethem also struggle with the postmodern heritage but always
refer to their 1960s predecessors with appreciation.
42 | The chapter “Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea” will further discuss
this.
43 | It is important to note that Wallace does not demonize entertaining arts
(neither in literature nor cinema and television), however, he is aware and
points at the distinction between “most kinds of ‘low’ art – which just
means art whose primary aim is to make money […]” (McCaffery 1993:
127) and “[r]eally good work [that] comes out of a willingness to disclose
yourself, open yourself up in spiritual and emotional ways that risk making you look banal or melodramatic or naïve or unhip or sappy, and to ask
the reader really to feel something.” (ibid: 148-149)
Introduction
grotesquely materialistic, how is it that we as human beings still have the capacity for joy, charity, genuine connections, for stuf that doesn’t have a price?” (ibid:
132)44 If irony and metaiction have become commodities, consumed through soap
operas and commercials on an average of six hours a day,45 serious iction has to
ind new ways (to produce the “generalization of sufering”) and can no longer rely
on outdated mechanisms. Wallace is not demonizing television, but tries to show
how it engulfs formerly progressive ideas. He wants contemporary literature to
take a new step and move forward.
Despite television’s hegemony in everyday life, serious writers can still “dramatize the fact that we still are human beings” (ibid). herefore, Wallace’s criticism of
irony and metaiction, at irst glance, seems somehow hypocritical in itself because
many of his own works include long metaictional passages and bear an ironic tone
that can hardly be ignored. his is the case most bluntly in “Westward the Course
of the Empire Takes its Way,” the concluding novella of his story collection Girl
With Curious Hair. his re-evaluation of literary means to achieve something contrary to their original meaning is the revolutionary aspect of postironic writings.
he programmatic claim of this story is already inscribed in its title, as Boswell
notes,
[…] the title clearly suggests, [that] the work seeks to chart, if not to arrive at,
a new direction for narrative art, one that will move fiction past John Barth’s
literature of exhaustion and the new realism of the 1980s. (Qtd. in Hamilton
2010: 102)
It is worthy to keep in mind Boswell’s conception that “Westward” not only deals
(in a metaictional way) with texts like Barth’s “Lost in the Funhouse” and “he
Literature of Exhaustion” but is a criticism of 1980s literature as well. It is important to elaborate the idea that “Westward” is actually a clear break with “high
postmodernism” and that Wallace’s implication of Barth’s motifs and styles is consciously used to “chart, if not to arrive at, a new direction for narrative art.”
44 | Interestingly Wallace uses the word “engaging” in this interview, a term
that is important for my analysis of the postironic narrator whom I position in the tradition of the “engaging narrator” as proposed by Robyn
Warhol (discussed in the chapter “Reading the Postironic”).
45 | “Statisticians report that television is watched over six hours a day in the
average American household.” (Wallace 1997a: 22)
29
30
Postirony
Moving “Westward” – Postironic Beginnings
While the title is a irst hint to the story’s purpose, the subsequent quotations,
preceding the narrative, stand for further ideas the story elaborates upon. he irst
quote reads: “As we are solipsists, and all die, the world dies with us. Only very
minor literature aims at apocalypse.” his statement by Anthony Burgess leads
directly to Wallace’s idea of a solipsistic society (most prominently depicted in Ininite Jest) and how his literary pieces work in a diferent direction. he second
quote: “For whom is the funhouse fun?” which is from Barth’s “Lost in the Funhouse” (advanced later by the narrator by asking: “But for whom, the proles grouse,
is the Funhouse a house?” (Wallace 2003: 239 original emphasis) leads to Wallace’s
criticism of conventional metaiction. he narrator (in a metaictional comment)
states that “[…] metaiction is untrue […]” (ibid: 332) and that unlike his teachers
from a previous generation, he wants to
[…] write something that stabs you [the reader] in the heart. That pierces you,
makes you think you’re going to die. The stuff would probably use metafiction as a bright smiling disguise, a harmless f loppy-shoed costume, because
metafiction is safe to read, familiar as syndication; and no victim is as delicious
as the one who smiles in relief at your familiar approach. (ibid: 333)
Nicoline Timmer reads this as the narrator’s failure to overcome what he
criticizes:
Apparently this narrator is still ‘locked into’ […] the kind of practice he is criticizing; the ‘intrusion’ after all has all the appearance of being metatextual; not
to mention the considerable amount of text that the narrator uses in commenting on metafiction. (2010: 104)
At irst sight this reading seems convincing, however, remembering Konstantinous’ above stated idea that Wallace uses “techniques historically associated with
metaiction (1) to generate forms of afect that theory held to be impossible and
(2) to relink private and public life [...] via an ethos of postironic belief” (2009b:
127) hints at another reading. he narrator’s inclusion of a means he suggests to
be outdated and conscious comment on that paradox – “[t]he stuf would probably
use metaiction as a bright smiling disguise” – can also be seen as an attempt of
redeining metaictionality in order to “generate forms of afect” (ibid.). he narrator denounces the sell-out of formerly rebellious ideas by ridiculing the foremost
metaictional story, namely “Lost in the Funhouse,” by parodying its stylistics and,
on a plot level, by describing the obviously capitalist idea of a franchise called Fun-
Introduction
house46 that will draw people by pretending to be countercultural when it is actually merely an institution with the sole intention to make money.47 “Westward”
proposes that the sharpest tools postmodernist writers employed to criticize society
become themselves part of this materialist environment. he Funhouse opening
takes place at “[…] the scheduled Reunion of everyone who has ever been in a
McDonald’s commercial” (Wallace 2003: 235). Scaling back his criticism to a more
personal level, the narrator, to make clear what he thinks of his literary surroundings, also makes fun of one of his creative writing classmates, “[…] she actually
went around calling herself a postmodernist. No matter where you are, you Don’t
Do his.” (ibid: 234 original emphasis)
he story is an attempt to disclose metaiction’s elapsed ability to alienate and
therefore highlight the possibility “to generate forms of afect” (Konstantinou
2009b: 127). his, in Wallace’s opinion, is a necessary step to achieve a literature
that is true again and “[...] stabs [the reader] in the heart” (2003: 332). By using long
metaictional asides (that mostly discuss their own metaictionality) “Westward”
tries to unveil contemporary literature’s struggle. Traditional metaiction’s idea
that the reader has to be reminded of reading a ictional account and that no convincing true realism can be established are, in the narrator’s opinion, superluous.
hese conventions are no longer necessary, no longer useful; even he Simpsons
and Saturday Night Live bring up these sorts of metaiction. hus contemporary
art should leave this approach behind and ind new ways of communicating with
the reader (in the sense of showing him a generalization of sufering). he narrator,
by including self-referential metaiction, implies that this does not change the way
the story is read; the narrator assumes that the contemporary reader is no longer
agitated, she is aware of the ictionality of the text and understands that a story can
never depict reality. he reader does not need to be and should not be “deceived” by
realism; instead, postironic narratives want to “stab” the reader’s heart, something
traditional realism cannot achieve in “postmodern” times.48 he “forms of afect”
46 | Ambrose (a John Barth alter ego) who, in “Westward,” is the author of
“Lost in the Funhouse” sold the name to an advertisement company which
then uses the “postmodern” meaning given to the story to introduce a nationwide franchise of “alternative clubs” named “Funhouse.” The narrator
broods about this and states “Ok true, Funhouse 1, like all the foreseen and
planned national chain of Funhouse franchises, is, in reality, just a discotheque.” (Wallace 2003: 259)
47 | In “Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea” I show that the inclusion of what
one criticizes makes sense and I have a closer look at Wallace’s essay “Joseph Frank’s Dostoevsky” in which this idea is explicitly stated by Wallace.
48 | This complex thought, that postmodern styles that became mainstream
can no longer touch the reader on an emotional level but that a return to
traditional realism (that surely touched readers in pre-television societies)
31
32
Postirony
Wallace wants the reader to experience cannot be conveyed by an “uncritically
earnest or naively nostalgic consciousness” (Konstantinou 2009b: 12). he 19th
century reader obviously does not exist anymore; there is a search for new ways to
activate the reader’s feelings. Timmer, also conscious of metaiction’s role in contemporary literature, therefore asks:
The pressing question that hovers somewhere between the lines in “Westward”
[…] is: what exactly could be the use of all this playing around with narrative
structures for which postmodern literature is renown; is it just ‘fun’ for fun’s
sake, and devoid of any humanness? (Timmer 2010: 106)
hat is, in a boiled down way, what the narrator in “Westward” advocates. “his
playing around with narrative structures” is (or rather has become since the 1970s)
exactly what Timmer insinuates. he narrator of Westward believes that metaiction became “‘fun’ for fun’s sake,” and is therefore outdated and no longer a valuable tool for activating the reader’s emotions. As Wallace stated elsewhere:
[...] there are things about the contemporary U.S. that make it distinctively hard
to be a real human being, […] half of fiction’s job is to dramatize what it is that
makes it tough. The other half is to dramatize the fact that we still are human
beings, now. (McCaffery 1993: 132)
“Westward” tries to achieve this by remodeling metaiction and irony in ways that
“see style as a personal necessity, as the only possible expression of a particular human consciousness” (Smith 2007: 4). In the chapter “Reading the Postironic” I will
discuss diferent narratological tools to demonstrate what is at stake in postironic
narratives and show that the weaknesses of a story like “Westward” (as depicted by
Timmer) can become strengths when a narrative is noniction instead of iction.
will be understood as banal and outdated leads the postironists to their
particular style. The chapter “Postirony – Conceptualizing an Idea” will
shed further light on this postironic inclusion of both realism and postmodern stylistics. In order to prevent misunderstandings, postironists do
not claim that realism is unable to emotionally engage. In Wallace’s words:
“[...] not because there hasn’t been great U.S. Realist fiction that’ll be read
and enjoyed forever, but because the big R’s form has now been absorbed
and suborned by commercial entertainment. The classical Realist form
is soothing, familiar and anesthetic; it drops us right into spectation. It
doesn’t set up the sort of expectations serious 1990s fiction ought to be
setting up in readers.” (McCaffery 1993: 138)
Introduction
J onatHan L etHem and n ick fLynn –
Postirony ’s 2 nd G eneration
he main emphasis of my discussion is put on Eggers’ and Wallace’s work. hey
are, in my opinion, the spearheads of the movement and therefore require the most
detailed examinations. However, many critics dealing with the postironic conine
themselves to the two authors, an aspect that underrates how widespread postirony is in contemporary literature. Due to the obliviousness and/or oversight of other
postironic authors by many critics, my last chapter addresses Jonathan Lethem
and Nick Flynn as authors who are inluenced by Wallace and Eggers and who
form an ensuing postironic group.49 Since they are not elaborately discussed but
rather introduced in order to show the postironic development, I also present them
only briely here.
Jonathan Lethem is best known for his novels Motherless Brooklyn (1999) and
he Fortress of Solitude (2003). Interestingly, in his more recent novel, Chronic
City (2009), many critics seem to recognize David Foster Wallace as the real world
model for the main protagonist. Toon Staes also describes this assumption (which
is also made about the main protagonist of Jefrey Eugenides’ he Marriage Plot
(2011) as notable because:
Both Lethem and Eugenides have acknowledged and denied on various occasions that they have based key plot elements in their novels on Wallace, but
perhaps more telling than the ambiguity of their answers to questions about
Wallace’s presence in these books is the simple fact that such questions were
even asked. (2012: 409)
I agree with Staes that it is telling to see Wallace in these characters: it shows the
iconic status Wallace has achieved in literary circles. he inluence of Wallace is
hard to deny in both authors.
Lethem’s he Ecstasy of Inluence is an essay collection that combines literary
criticism with an autobiographical narrative. In its form it is comparable to Wallace’s autocriticism. My discussion will show that Lethem’s approach is postironic
in its attempt to communicate with the reader. I will highlight how his mix of criticism and autobiographical facts establishes a form of engagement on the reader’s
side typical for postironic noniction.
49 | To call two writers a group seems overstated, the actual group of second
generation postironists includes more writers but since they have only
published fiction so far, they will not be addressed in this dissertation.
However, if one wants to follow the postironic development as a whole, I
recommend reading: Ferris (2007), Kunkel (2005), Lerner (2014), and Lin
(2013).
33
34
Postirony
In contrast to Lethem, Wallace, and Eggers, Nick Flynn is best known for his
noniction work. Flynn published three memoirs so far, Another Bullshit Night in
Suck City (2004), he Ticking is the Bomb (2010), and he Reenactments (2013).
While all of them are great examples of postironic autobiographical writings, I will
not concentrate on one particular book and discuss it in detail but rather take key
passages out of all three memoirs to explain Flynn’s postironic approach. Most interestingly, however, is his third memoir, he Reenactments, which is a meta-autobiography concerned with the making of a Hollywood movie out of his irst memoir, Another Bullshit Night in Suck City.50 In their metaictional form, Flynn’s books
can be compared to Eggers’ AHWOSG. In Flynn’s books the occupation with the
act of writing the memoir almost overshadows the actual memoir. Even though
Flynn is the least experimental writer in terms of style, my reading will show how
Flynn’s narrator puts the reader at the center of the narrative, always aiming at a
sincere communication.
synoPsis
Some brief comments on the structure of this book. At irst, I return to the above
introduced idea of postirony. Because this concept is at the core of my approach,
a more elaborate investigation of the term is necessary, and both its historical development as well as its difering contemporary depictions will be discussed. Besides Wallace’s ideas, which will be further observed, I review Søren Kierkegaard’s,
Richard Rorty’s, and Linda Hutcheon’s inluence on postironic thought. hey can
be named the triumvirate of irony-critics and it is important to look at their publications on irony to understand the role this concept plays in contemporary society.
Furthermore, I briely touch upon Jedediah Purdy’s For Common hings and Alex
Shakar’s he Savage Girl, two contemporary irony-critics who ofer important and
interesting thoughts about contemporary irony but who are not exactly postironists and therefore are not examined separately in my close reading chapters.
Following this overview, I clarify and explore narratological aspects that are
important for the later close readings. James Phelan’s ideas about a rhetorical narratology that investigates ethical aspects of writer-reader communication function
as the precondition for understanding the particular communication that appears
in postironic noniction. His conclusions will be illuminated by adding Gerald
Prince’s concept of the narratee and Peter J. Rabinowitz’s ideas of diferent audience functions. Both theorists are important for the understanding of the engaging
narrator, an approach by Robyn Warhol that claims that speciic narrators use speciic narrations in order to emotionally engage the reader.
50 | The movie, Being Flynn, was released in 2012, starring Robert de Niro as
Flynn’s father and Paul Dano as Nick Flynn.
Introduction
hese inquiries are preconditions for the close readings that follow. At irst I
examine Dave Eggers’ AHWOSG, followed by David Wallace’s he Pale King (not
the entire novel but the autocritical chapter “Author’s Foreword”), his travel report
“A Supposedly Fun hing I’ll Never Do Again,” and his essay “Consider the Lobster.” Finally, I give an overview of two more postironic writers, Nick Flynn and
Jonathan Lethem.
In the end, I hope to have convincingly argued that postironic literature, especially in its noniction form, addresses its reader in a particular way intended to
establish some form of sincere communication and by using an engaging narrator,
at best, transports an intradiegetic feeling into the reader’s extratextual world. hat
is, moving beyond existing realms in literature and establishing nothing less than
a new real world movement.
35