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Document Description
Title
Dismissing
charges:
a
study
of the
reception
of
Willian
Gaddis's
A
Frolic
of his
own
Author
O'Brien
,
Fergus
E.
,
1971-
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1996.
English
Date
1996
Pagination
98 leaves
Subject
Gaddis
,
William
,
1922-
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English
Discipline
English
Language
Eng
Temporal Coverage
1994-1996
20th Century
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
[85]-98.
Abstract
This
thesis
explores
the
reception
of
William
Gaddis's
latest
novel
, A
Frolic
of His
Own
(1994)
, and
presents
a
reading
of the
novel
that
is
more
sympathetic
than
most
tendered
to
date.
By
examining
the
reception
of this
work
,
I
reveal
several
patterns
of
negative
criticism
that have
emerged.
Gaddis's
novel
makes
use
of
innovative
narrative
techniques
in his
portrait
of
American
postmodern
society.
The
participatory
role
of the
reader
is
essential
here as
Gaddis's
fiction
tends
to be
both
complex
and
erudite.
--
Chapter
One
briefly
explains
the
theory
of
reception
put
forth
by
Hans
Robert
Jauss
in his
essay
"Literary
History
as a
Challenge
to
Literary
Theory."
I
apply
the
essential
tenets
of
Jauss's
Reception
Theory
to the
many
reviews
of A
Frolic
of His
Own.
The
examination
of the
popular
reception
of
Gaddis's
work
better
enables
me
to
contend
with its
complexities.
--
Chapter
Two
studies
the
presence
of
indeterminacy
in the
novel.
I
address
the
notion
of
mimesis
and the
representation
of
reality
in
literature
in
addition
to the
reader's
role
in
postulating
real-world
referentiality.
My
concern
here
is
not to
create
a
more
complex
text
than that
suggested
by the
majority
of the
novel's
reviewers
, but
merely
to
demonstrate
the
utility
of
ambiguity
to the
reader
of this
rich
,
innovative
fiction.
--
Chapter
Three
addresses
allusion
, a
second
readerly
challenge
left
virtually
unexamined
by the
reviewers
of A
Frolic
of His
Own.
By
exploring
Gaddis's
erudite
and
often
obscure
references
and
citations
,
I
develop
a
strong
connection
between
allusion
and
humour
in the
novel.
Gaddis's
employment
of
cultural
,
historical
, and
literary
allusion
also
adds
to the
realism
of his
text.
--
This
analysis
of the
novel
ultimately
reveals
both
Gaddis's
realistic
portrayal
of
late-twentieth-century
American
society
and his
reliance
upon
readerly
participation
in
fiction.
Finally
,
Gaddis's
novel
calls
upon
each
reader
to
create
a
personal
fiction.
Recognition
of
gaps
left
by
indeterminacies
and
allusions
can
only
enhance
the
myriad
hermeneutic
possibilities.
The
insights
derived
from the
reader's
collaboration
with the
text
can
then be
employed
in the
reader's
interactions
with
his/her
own
world.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1175942
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(9.39
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/FergusEOBrien_96.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
30490.cpd