Saturday, September 14, 2019
Literary Criticism of Don DeLillo
Literary Criticism of Don DeLilloââ¬Å"It's my nature to keep quiet about most things. Even the ideas in my work. When you try to unravel something you've written, you belittle it in a way. It was created as a mystery, in part.â⬠ââ¬âDon DeLillo, from the 1979 interview with Tom LeClairThere are a number of books and essays which are devoted to analysis of Don Delillo's writing. This page concentrates on the books only (for the most part), with most recent on top.Terrorism, Media, and the Ethics of Fiction: Transatlantic Perspectives on Don DeLillo (2010)Great to see the publication of this book of essays from the DeLillo Conference held in Osnabrà ¼ck, Germany in 2008 (see my page on the Conference). Edited by conference organizers Peter Schneck and Philipp Schweighauser.Terrorism, Media, and the Ethics of Fiction is published by Continuum, ISBN-13: 9781441139931, 2010 (hardcover, 264 pages).Contents include: Introduction ââ¬â Philipp Schweighauser and Peter Schneck M emory Work after 9/11The Wake of Terror: Don DeLillo's ââ¬Å"In the Ruins of the Future,â⬠ââ¬Å"Baader-Meinhof,â⬠and Falling Man ââ¬â Linda S. Kauffman Grieving and Memory in Don DeLillo's Falling Man ââ¬â Silvia Caporale Bizzini Collapsing Identities: The Representation and Imagination of the Terrorist in Falling Man ââ¬â Sascha Pà ¶hlmann Writers, Terrorists, and the Masses6,500 Weddings and 2,750 Funerals: Mao II, Falling Man, and the Mass Effect ââ¬â Mikko Keskinen Influence and Self-Representation: Don DeLillo's Artists and Terrorists in Postmodern Mass Society ââ¬â Leif Grà ¶ssinger The Art of Terrorââ¬âthe Terror of Art: DeLillo's Still Life of 9/11, Giorgio Morandi, Gerhard Richter, and Performance Art ââ¬â Julia Apitzsch Don DeLillo and Johan GrimonprezGrimonprez's Remix ââ¬â Eben WoodDial T for Terror: Don DeLillo's Mao II and Johan Grimonprez' Dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y ââ¬â Martyn Colebrook Deathward and Other PlotsTerror, Asce ticism, and Epigrammatic Writing in Don DeLillo's Fiction ââ¬â Paula Martà n Salvà ¡n The End of Resolution? Reflections on the Ethics of Closure in Don DeLillo's Detective Plots ââ¬â Philipp Schweighauser and Adrian S. Wisnicki The Ethics of FictionSlow Man, Dangling Man, Falling Man: Don DeLillo and the Ethics of Fiction ââ¬â Peter Boxall Falling Man: Performing Fiction ââ¬â Marie-Christine Lepsââ¬Å"Mysterium tremendum et fascinansâ⬠: Don DeLillo, Rudolf Otto, and the Search for Numinous Experience ââ¬â Peter Schneck CodaThe DeLillo Era: Literary Generations in the Postmodern Period ââ¬â David Cowart (Sept. 6, 2010)The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo (2008)Above is a shot of the book ââ¬Ëon location' in Cambridge, with St Johns College in the background; I found the book at the Cambridge Book Shop, and the clerk told me that the book had just come in that day! (May 13, 2008)The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo is a new book edited by John Duvall, and it features articles covering much of DeLillo's work by many familiar names of DeLillo criticism. Published by Cambridge University Press, ISBN-13: 9780521690898, 2008 (paperback, 203 pages). There's a hardback asà well.Contents include: Introduction: ââ¬Å"The power of history and the persistence of mysteryâ⬠John N. Duvall Part I. Aesthetic and Cultural Influences ââ¬Å"DeLillo and modernismâ⬠Philip Nel ââ¬Å"DeLillo, postmodernism, postmodernityâ⬠Peter Knight Part II. Early Fiction ââ¬Å"DeLillo and media cultureâ⬠Peter Boxall ââ¬Å"DeLillo's apocalyptic satireâ⬠Joseph Dewey ââ¬Å"DeLillo and the political thrillerâ⬠Tim Engles Part III. Major Novels ââ¬Å"White Noiseâ⬠Stacey Olster ââ¬Å"Libraâ⬠Jeremy Green ââ¬Å"Underworldâ⬠Patrick O'Donnell Part IV. Themes and Issues ââ¬Å"DeLillo and masculinityâ⬠Ruth Helyer ââ¬Å"DeLillo's Dedealian artistsâ⬠Mark Osteen ââ¬Å"DeLillo and the power of la nguageâ⬠David Cowart ââ¬Å"DeLillo and mysteryâ⬠John McClure Conclusion: ââ¬Å"Writing amid the ruins: 9/11 and Cosmopolisâ⬠Joseph Conte It's unclear how much of this material is truly new; much may be adapted from previously published work.Beyond Grief and Nothing: A Reading of Don DeLillo (2006)Beyond Grief and Nothing is a new book by Joseph Dewey from the University of South Carolina Press. The book traces a thematic trajectory in DeLillo from his first short story to ââ¬ËLove-Lies-Bleeding'. The book examines DeLillo as a profoundly spiritual writer, a writer who has wrestled with his Catholic upbringing (the title comes from the famous line from Faulkner's ââ¬ËWild Palms' that forms a motif in Godard's ââ¬ËBreathless') and who has emerged over the last decade as perhaps the most important religious writer in American literature since Flannery O'Connor.Dewey finds DeLillo's concerns to be organized around three rubrics that mark the writer's own cre ative evolution: the love of the street, the embrace of the word, and the celebration of the soul.Joseph Dewey is an Associate Professor, American literature at University of Pittsburgh, and heco-edited Underwords (see below). 184 pages, hardcover, $34.95.Don DeLillo: The Possibility of Fiction (2006)Don DeLillo:The Possibility of Fiction by Peter Boxall (Routledge). I don't know much about this book, except for the fact that it's expensive! Dr. Peter Boxall is a lecturer in English Literature at the University of Sussex, and has previously published on Beckett (among others).Approaches to Teaching DeLillo's White Noise (2006)Approaches to Teaching DeLillo's White Noise is a new book edited by Tim Engles and John N. Duvall. From the MLA website:This volume, like others in the MLA's Approaches to Teaching World Literature series, is divided into two parts. The first part, ââ¬Å"Materials,â⬠suggests readings and resources for both instructor and students of White Noise. The sec ond part, ââ¬Å"Approaches,â⬠contains eighteen essays that establish cultural, technological, and theoretical contexts (e.g., whiteness studies); place the novel in different survey courses (e.g., one that explores the theme of American materialism); compare it with other novels by DeLillo (e.g., Mao II); and give examples of classroom techniques and strategies in teaching it (e.g., the use of disaster films).The book is aimed at folks who include White Noise in their syllabus, and it includes pieces from Mark Osteen, Phil Nel, John Duvall, Tim Engles and many more.Benjamin Kunkel on Novelists and Terrorists (2005)In the New York Times Book Review of September 11, 2005, Benjamin Kunkel offers ââ¬Å"Dangerous Charactersâ⬠, an essay on the ââ¬Ëterrorist novel' of the pre 9/11 era. DeLillo unsurprisingly features in the essay. It's worth reading in its entirety, but I pull out a couple quotes here that were of particular interest to me:Terrorists might be a novelist's r ivals, as Don DeLillo's novelist character maintains in â⬠Mao IIâ⬠(1991), but they were also his proxies. No matter how realistic, the terrorist novel was also a kind of metafiction, or fiction about fiction.DeLillo saw that novelists, like terrorists, were solitary and obscure agents, â⬠men in small rooms,â⬠preparing symbolic provocations to be unleashed on the public with a bang. Of course this could refer only to a certain kind of novelist, starting perhaps with Flaubert and ending, DeLillo suggested, with Beckett, whose work could be taken as an indictment of an entire civilization, and whose authority when it came to that civilization was paradoxically derived from his appearing to stand completely outside it.Don DeLillo: Balance at the Edge of Belief (2004)Don DeLillo: Balance at the Edge of Belief by Jesse Kavadlo, published in 2004 by Peter Lang Publishing (ISBN: 0-8204-6351-5). Here's how the back cover puts it:Don DeLillo ââ¬â winner of the Nation al Book Award, the William Dean Howells Medal, and the Jerusalem Prize ââ¬â is one of the most important novelists of the late-twentieth and early-twenty-first centuries. While his work can be understood and taught as prescient and postmodern examples of millennial culture, this book argues that DeLillo's recent novels ââ¬â White Noise, Libra, Mao II, Underworld, and The Body Artist ââ¬â are more concerned with spiritual crisis. Although DeLillo's worlds are rife with rejection of belief and littered with faithlessness, estrangement, and desperation, his novels provide a balancing moral corrective against the conditions they describe.à Speaking the vernacular of contemporary America, DeLillo explores the mysteries of what it means to be human.Don DeLillo ââ¬â Bloom's Modern Critical Views (2003)Don DeLillo was published by Chelsea House in 2003, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom.The book consists of previously published critical essays on DeLillo:â⠬Å"Introductionâ⬠by Harold Bloom ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo's Search for Walden Pondâ⬠by Michael Oriard ââ¬Å"Preface and Don DeLilloâ⬠by Robert Nadeau ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo's Americaâ⬠by Bruce Bawer ââ¬Å"White Magic: Don DeLillo's Intelligence Networksâ⬠by Greg Tate ââ¬Å"Myth, Magic and Dread: Reading Culture Religiouslyâ⬠by Gregory Salyer ââ¬Å"The Romantic Metaphysics of Don DeLilloâ⬠by Paul Maltby ââ¬Å"For Whom the Bell Tolls: Don DeLillo's Americanaâ⬠by David Cowart ââ¬Å"Consuming Narratives: Don DeLillo and the ââ¬ËLethal' Readingâ⬠by Christian Mararu ââ¬Å"Romanticism and the Postmodern Novel: Three Scenes from Don DeLillo's White Noiseâ⬠by Lou F. Caton ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo's Postmodern Pastoralâ⬠by Dana Phillipsââ¬Å"Afterthoughts on Don DeLillo's Underworldâ⬠by Tony Tanner ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËWhat About a Problem That Doesn't Have a Solution?': Stone's A Flag for Sunrise, DeLillo's Mao II, and the Politics of Political Fictionâ⬠by Jeoffrey S. Bull White Noise: A Reader's Guide (2003)Don DeLillo's White Noise: A Reader's Guide by Leonard Orr was published in 2003. The book is published as part of the Continuum Contemporaries series, sells for $9.95 and is 96 pages.Underwords: Perspectives on Don DeLillo's Underworld (2002)Underwords: Perspectives on Don DeLillo's Underworld is edited by Joseph Dewey, Steven G. Kellman, and Irving Malin, and published by University ofà Delaware Press in Sept. 2002 (ISBN 0-87413-785-3 $39.50). Here is a picture & the blurb:Don DeLillo's 1997 masterwork Underworld, one of the most acclaimed and long-awaited novels of the last twenty years, was immediately recognized as a landmark novel, not only in the long career of one of America's most distinguished novelists but also in the ongoing evolution of the postmodern novel. Vast in scope, intricately organized, and densely allusive, the text provided an immediate and engaging challenge to readers of c ontemporary fiction.This collection of thirteen essays brings together new and established voices in American studies and contemporary American literature to assess the place of this remarkable novel not only within the postmodern tradition but within the larger patterns of American literature and culture as well. By seeking to place the novel within such a context, this lively collection of provocative readings offers a valuable guide for both students and scholars of the American literary imagination.The book contains:ââ¬Å"A Gathering Under Words: An Introductionâ⬠by Joseph Dewey ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËWhat Beauty, What Power': Speculations on the Third Edgarâ⬠by Irving Malin and Joseph Dewey ââ¬Å"Subjectifying the Objective: Underworld as Mutable Narrativeâ⬠by David Yetter ââ¬Å"Underworld: Sin and Atonementâ⬠by Robert McMinnââ¬Å"ââ¬ËShall These Bones Live'â⬠by David Cowart ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo's Logogenetic Underworldâ⬠by Steven G. Kellman â⠬Å"Pynchon and DeLilloâ⬠by Timothy L. Parrish ââ¬Å"Conspiratorial Jesuits in the Postmodern Novel: Mason & Dixon and Underworldâ⬠by Carl Ostrowski ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo, John Updike, and the Sustaining Power of Mythâ⬠by Donald J. Greiner ââ¬Å"In the Nick of Time: DeLillo's Nick Shay, Fitzgerald's Nick Carraway, and the Myth of the American Adamâ⬠by Joanne Gass ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo, T.S. Eliot, and the Redemption of America's Atomic Waste Landâ⬠by Paul Gleason ââ¬Å"The Unmaking of History: Baseball, Cold War, and Underworldâ⬠by Kathleen Fitzpatrick ââ¬Å"Underworld or: How I Learned to Keep Worrying and Live the Bombâ⬠by Thomas Myers ââ¬Å"The Baltimore Catechism; or Comedy in Underworldâ⬠by Ira Nadel The book also includes a bibliography of Underworld reviews and notices by Marc Singer and Jackson R. Bryer.Don DeLillo: The Physics of Language (2002)Don DeLillo ââ¬â The Physics of Language by David Cowart was published in Feb. 20 02 by the University of Georgia Press. Here is a link to more info: http://www.ugapress.org/index.php/books/don_delillo/Cowart examines the work of DeLillo with an emphasis on language; DeLillo's use of it in the novels, and the way in which characters in the books are characterized by different types of language. He divides the novels into three groups: the tentative early novels (End Zone, Great Jones Street, Players and Running Dog), the popular fictions (White Noise, Libra and Mao II) and the works of great achievement (Americana, Ratner's Star, The Names, Underworld and The Body Artist).Throughout his twelve novels, DeLillo foregrounds language and the problems of language. He has an uncanny ear for the mannered, elliptical, non sequitur-ridden rhythms of vernacular conversation (the common response to ââ¬Å"thank youâ⬠has somehow become ââ¬Å"no problemâ⬠). His is an adept parodist of the specialized discourses that proliferate in contemporary society ââ¬â in sport, business, politics, academe, medicine, entertainment, and journalism. The jargons of science, technology, and military deterrence offer abundant targets, too. But the author's interest in these discourses goes beyond simple parody, and it is the task of criticism to gauge the extra dimensions of DeLillo's thinking about language.Underworld: A Reader's Guide (2002)Don DeLillo's Underworld: A Reader's Guide by John Duvall was published in early 2002. The book is published as part of the Continuum Contemporaries series, sells for $9.95 and is 96 pages.The book has five chapters: The Novelist, giving background on DeLillo; Theà Novel, the main section of the book with an analysis of the main themes; The Novel's Reception, on the initial reviews of Underworld; The Novel's Performance, on the subsequent academic treatment; and Further Reading and Discussion.Critical Essays on Don DeLillo (2000)Critical Essays on Don DeLillo, edited by Hugh Ruppersburg, and Tim Engles, published b y G.K. Hall, appeared in 2000. Contains a section of book reviews and a section of essays, covering each novel through Underworld.The essays are:ââ¬Å"For Whom the Bell Tolls: Don DeLillo's Americanaâ⬠by David Cowart ââ¬Å"Deconstructing the Logos: Don DeLillo's End Zoneâ⬠by Thomas LeClair ââ¬Å"The End of Pynchon's Rainbow: Postmodern Terror and Paranoia in DeLillo's Ratner's Starâ⬠by Glen Scott Allen ââ¬Å"Marketing Obsession: The Fascinations of Running Dogâ⬠by Mark Osteen ââ¬Å"Discussing the Untellable: Don DeLillo's The Namesâ⬠by Paula Bryant ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËWho are you, literally?': Fantasies of the White Self in Don DeLillo's White Noiseâ⬠by Tim Engles ââ¬Å"Baudrillard, DeLillo's White Noise, and the End of Heroic Narrativeâ⬠by Leonard Wilcox ââ¬Å"The Fable of the Ants: Myopic Interactions in DeLillo's Libraâ⬠by Bill Millard ââ¬Å"Libra and the Subject of Historyâ⬠by Christopher M. Mottââ¬Å"Can the Intellectual Still Speak? The Example of Don DeLillo's Mao IIâ⬠by Silvia Caporale Bizzini ââ¬Å"Excavating the Underworld of Race and Waste in Cold War History: Baseball, Aesthetics and Ideologyâ⬠by John N. Duvall ââ¬Å"Everything is Connected: Underworld's Secret History of Paranoiaâ⬠by Peter Knight ââ¬Å"Awful Symmetries in Don DeLillo's Underworldâ⬠by Arthur Saltzman American Magic and Dread (2000)Mark Osteen's book on DeLillo, American Magic and Dread: Don DeLillo's Dialogue with Culture, was published by the University of Pennsylvania Press in June, 2000. The book examines DeLillo's work from some of the early stories thru Underworld.Modern Fiction Studies (1999)Modern Fiction Studies special issue on DeLillo (Vol 45, No. 3, Fall 1999), includes 10 essays, including work from such friends of the site as Phil Nel, Mark Osteen and Jeremy Green.Undercurrent (1999)In May 1999 an all-DeLillo issue of Erick Heroux's online journal Undercurrent appeared (Number 7). It co ntains the following essays:ââ¬Å"Celebration & Annihilation: The Balance of Underworldâ⬠by Jesse Kavadlo ââ¬Å"DeLillo's Underworld: Everything that Descends Must Convergeâ⬠by Robert Castle ââ¬Å"The Inner Workings: Techno-science & Self in Underworldâ⬠by Jennifer Pincott ââ¬Å"American Simulacra: DeLillo in Light of Postmodernismâ⬠by Scott Rettberg ââ¬Å"Baudrillard's Primitivism & White Noise: ââ¬ËThe only avant-garde we've got'â⬠by Bradley Butterfield ââ¬Å"Beyond Baudrillard's Simulacral Postmodern World:White Noiseâ⬠by Haidar Eid Postmodern Culture (1994)The January, 1994 issue of Postmodern Culture featured the DeLillo Cluster, four essays all dealing with DeLillo edited by Glen Scott Allen and Stephen Bernstein.Glen Scott Allen, ââ¬Å"Raids on the Conscious: Pynchon's Legacy of Paranoia and the Terrorism of Uncertainty in Don DeLillo's Ratner's Starâ⬠Peter Baker, ââ¬Å"The Terrorist as Interpreter: Mao II in Postmodern Con textâ⬠Stephen Bernstein, ââ¬Å"Libra and the Historical Sublimeâ⬠Bill Millard, ââ¬Å"The Fable of the Ants: Myopic Interactions in DeLillo's Libraâ⬠Don DeLillo (1993)Don DeLillo is a book by Douglas Keesey, a part of the Twayne's U.S. Authorsà Series, published by Macmillan, 1993, 228 pages. This book has a chapter on each novel, as well as brief summaries of the stories and plays.Keesey's reading of DeLillo's work is that his novels ââ¬Å"engage in the intensive study of media representations of reality that threaten to distance us from nature and from ourselves.â⬠Thus he links Americana to film, End Zone to language, etc.I found the chapter on Americana quite interesting, as Keesey rebuts those critics who categorized this book as a typical first novel, poorly constructed and lacking charcter development. He argues that on closer examination DeLillo is clearly in control of the book's structure and characters, having made ââ¬Å"fully conscious aesthetic choices.â⬠I tried to get this book through a store, but they couldn't get it, so I ended up buying direct ââ¬â call 1 800 323 7445 to order.There's an article by Keesey in Pynchon Notes 32-33 entitled ââ¬Å"The Ideology of Detection in Pynchon and DeLilloâ⬠.Introducing Don DeLillo (1991)Edited by Frank Lentricchia, 1991. Published by Duke University Press, 221 pages. Lentricchia is the editor of South Atlantic Quarterly and Professor of English at Duke.The book consists of 12 articles:ââ¬Å"The American Writer as Bad Citizenâ⬠by Frank Lentricchiaââ¬Å"Opposites,â⬠Chapter 10 of Ratner's Star by Don DeLilloà ââ¬Å"An Outsider in This Societyâ⬠: An Interview with Don DeLillo by Anthony DeCurtis (an expanded version of the November 1988 Rolling Stone interview)ââ¬Å"How to Read Don DeLilloâ⬠by Daniel Aaronà ââ¬Å"Clinging to the Rock: A Novelist's Choices in the New Mediocracyâ⬠by Hal Crowther ââ¬Å"Postmodern Romance: Don DeLillo a nd the Age of Conspiracyâ⬠by Johnà A. McClure ââ¬Å"Some Speculations on Don DeLillo and the Cinematic Realâ⬠by Eugene Goodheart ââ¬Å"The Product: Bucky Wunderlick, Rock ââ¬Ën Roll, and Don DeLillo's Great Jones Streetâ⬠by Anthony DeCurtis ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo's Perfect Starry Nightâ⬠by Charles Molesworthââ¬Å"Alphabetic Pleasures: The Namesâ⬠by Dennis A. Foster ââ¬Å"The Last Things Before the Last: Notes on White Noiseâ⬠by John Frow ââ¬Å"Libra as Postmodern Critiqueâ⬠by Frank Lentricchia More on Frank and Donâ⬠¦Jason Camlot delivered an interesting address entitled ââ¬ËFrank Lentricchia's Don DeLillo: ââ¬Å"Introducingâ⬠, Postmodern Modernism and the Academic Fear of Death' which was given at University of Oregon, May 1993. I am happy to say that this work is now back on the web, hosted here at Don DeLillo's America.Here's a taste:What, then, can be said to make Lentricchia's work as a critic equally relevant and eff ective? In a most obvious sense, it is the position he assumes in relation to the important author that he is introducing that works to establish his own importance. Don Delillo was already a popular author soon after 1985, and by this time he was becoming a significant object of academic attention as well, but these two facts had little bearing on one another, but rather were two distinct phenomena. At least this is what Lentricchia's role as editor and introducer seems to suggest. It is as if the true social significance of Delillo could not exist until a critic such as Lentricchia recognized it, patented it, in a way, by introducing Delillo as the last of the modernists in the postmodern era.New Essays on White Noise (1991)This is a short book of critical essays on White Noise, which is also edited by Lentricchia, published by Cambridge University Press in 1991 (115 pages).The book has five essays:ââ¬Å"Introductionâ⬠by Frank Lentricchia ââ¬Å"Whole Families Shopping at N ight!â⬠by Thomas J. Ferraro ââ¬Å"Adolf, We Hardly Knew Youâ⬠by Paul A. Cantor ââ¬Å"Lust Removed from Natureâ⬠by Michael Valdez Moses ââ¬Å"Tales of the Electronic Tribeâ⬠by Frank Lentricchia Here's more info on the book.In the Loop ââ¬â Don DeLillo and the Systems Novel (1987)By Tom LeClair, 1987. Published by University of Illinois Press, 244 pages. LeClair is Professor of English at University of Cincinnati. This is a look at all of DeLillo's novels (through White Noise) in the context of the ââ¬Å"systems novelâ⬠. Includes a complete DeLillo bibliography.First Epigraph: ââ¬Å"Somebody ought to make a list of books that seem to bend back on themselves. I think Malcolm Lowry saw Under the Volcano as a wheel-like structure. And in Finnegans Wake we're meant to go from the last page to the first. In different ways I've done this myself.â⬠ââ¬â Don DeLillo, ââ¬Å"Interview,â⬠Anything Can HappenFrom the Preface:In the Loop also de scribes the situation of the reader who has already entered a Don DeLillo novel, as my first epigraph suggests. DeLillo consistently creates polarized structuresââ¬âof genre, situation, character, language, toneââ¬âthat double the novel back upon itself, questioning its generic codes, its beginnings and development, its creator's position toward it, his relation with the reader, who becomes self-conscious, reflective about both his reading and himself, a mobius-stripping away of assumptions about the forms that DeLillo uses, the charged subjects he encircles with his reversals, and the act of reading from beginning to end.Here's the text of a lecture LeClair gave in March 1993 entitled ââ¬Å"Me and Maoà IIâ⬠.Other Books with DeLillo in the TitleCivello, Paul. American Literary Naturalism and its Twentieth-century Transformations: Frank Norris, Ernest Hemingway, Don DeLillo. (University of Georgia Press, 1994, 208 pages). Chapters 8-10 deal with DeLillo, End Zone and Libra in particular.Hantke, Steffen. Conspiracy and Paranoia in Contemporary American Fiction: The works of Don DeLillo and Joseph McElroy (Peter Lang, 1994).Weinstein, Arnold. Nobody's Home: Speech, Self, and Place in American Fiction From Hawthorne to DeLillo (Oxford University Press, 1993, 349 pages). Chapter 14 is ââ¬Å"Don DeLillo: Rendering the Words of the Tribeâ⬠pages 288-315.Back to DeLillo's America Last updated: 06-SEP-2010 Send in some news!
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