The Uses of Brevity: Valuing the “No More to Be Said” in Jean Echenoz’s Plan of Occupancy and the Transcontinental “Critical Novel”

dc.contributor.authorThomas Phillipsen_US
dc.date.accessioned2014-10-27T15:39:51Z
dc.date.available2014-10-27T15:39:51Z
dc.date.issued2013-09-??zh_TW
dc.description.abstractThis paper examines the value of brevity in contemporary French novels, particularly Jean Echenoz’s Plan of Occupancy, in relation to the broader context of transcontinental fiction. Its central claim is that the stylistic minimalism of such fiction informs a “minoritarian” subjectivity that has both aesthetic and political implications. Additionally, I discuss, in brief, other texts that are central to this issue including Don DeLillo’s The Body Artist, an example of an American novel that not only limits itself to a page count far below the average in American fiction, but presents a style that is indicative of precisely the kind of minimalism that is accepted and, indeed, celebrated by DeLillo’s French contemporaries.en_US
dc.identifier5A4634EE-32B5-3207-256F-DC8F33A7A46Fzh_TW
dc.identifier.urihttp://rportal.lib.ntnu.edu.tw/handle/20.500.12235/23379
dc.language英文zh_TW
dc.publisher英語學系zh_tw
dc.relation39(2),163-185zh_TW
dc.relation.ispartof同心圓:文學與文化研究zh_tw
dc.subject.othertranscontinentalen_US
dc.subject.otherliteratureen_US
dc.subject.otherminimalismen_US
dc.subject.othersubjectivityen_US
dc.titleThe Uses of Brevity: Valuing the “No More to Be Said” in Jean Echenoz’s Plan of Occupancy and the Transcontinental “Critical Novel”zh-tw

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