Musing the Mosaic

Approaches to Ronald Sukenick

Edited by Matthew Roberson

Subjects: American Literature
Series: SUNY series in Postmodern Culture
Paperback : 9780791457283, 294 pages, May 2003
Hardcover : 9780791457276, 294 pages, May 2003

Alternative formats available from:

Table of contents

Introduction
Matthew Roberson

Taking the Line for a Walk: In Form to Narralogues, A History in Medias Res
Steve Tomasula

"At Play in the Fields of Formal Thinking": Up and Postmodernist Metafiction
Charles B. Harris

What's Your Story: Narration and "A New Knowledge of Reality" in The Death of the Novel and Other Stories
Nancy Blake

Sukenick's Posthumans
Ursula K. Heise

Interruption Discontinuity Imperfection It Can't Be Helped
Campbell Tatham

Explorations of Postmodern Time, Space, and Image: Considering the Works of Ronald Sukenick and David Salle
Charles Russell

Sukenick in Space, or, The Other Truth of the Page
Brian McHale

Graphiction: Technological Reality in Ronald Sukenick's 98.6, Doggy Bag, and Mosaic Man
Lance Olsen

The Artist is the Medium is the Message: A Ron Sukenick Re-Mix
Mark Amerika

Unwriting/Rewriting the Master Narratives of "Bankrupt" Modernity: Ronald Sukenick's Mosaic Man
Marcel Cornis-Pope

Down as Up, Out as In: Memoir as Manifesto
JR Foley

Exploring the Question of Values: An Interview with Ronald Sukenick
Larry McCaffery

8½ Ronnies
Jerome Klinkowitz

Selected Bibliography

List of Contributors

Index

Examines Sukenick's role in reshaping the American literary tradition.

Description

In Musing the Mosaic prominent critics of postmodern and contemporary fiction and culture discuss the fictional and theoretical works of Ronald Sukenick, one of the most important American writers to emerge from the late 1960s. Sukenick has been a prolific participant in reshaping the American literary tradition for two generations and played a pivotal role in the creation and growth of the Fiction Collective and FC2 publishing houses, as well as the journals American Book Review and Black Ice Magazine. In his work he argues that contemporary fiction can neither perform traditional functions nor rely on any conventions in an ever-more dynamic world. Staying true to Sukenick's own creative style, one that takes the seams out of writing before re-stitching it in ways that are truly novel, the contributors examine how and why his writing comes closer to the dissolving, fragmentary nature of reality and its lack of closure than perhaps anything written before it.

Matthew Roberson is Professor of English at the State University of West Georgia and the author of 1998.6.