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Don DeLillo, White Noise Lecture II

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Don DeLillo, White Noise Lecture II Ramon Saldivar Stanford University Everything is concealed in symbolism. Murray Jay Suskind WN 37 Supermarket as revelation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Don DeLillo, White Noise Lecture II


1
Don DeLillo, White Noise Lecture II
  • Ramon Saldivar
  • Stanford University

2
Everything is concealed in symbolism. Murray
Jay Suskind
  • WN 37
  • Supermarket as revelation
  • WN 38
  • Supermarket as renewal
  • WN 34 Pockets of rapport
  • magic act . . . of adults and children, sharing
    unaccountable things.

3
Epiphanies Classical and Modern
  • Epiphany
  • In Hellenistic times an epiphany (from the Greek
    epiphania, "manifestation"), was an appearance of
    divine power in a person or event
  • The New Testament uses the word to denote the
    final appearing of Christ at the end of time but
    in 2 Timothy 110 it refers to his coming as
    Saviour on earth.
  • James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young
    Man, 171
  • Transformation of the material world by the
    imagination

4
Postmodern Epiphanies
  • WN 148-49
  • a moment of splendid transcendence
  • Manifestation of transcendence in shopping
  • Sublime boundary between the classical, the
    modern, and the postmodern

5
Postmodern Sunsets
  • WN 216
  • Another postmodern sunset, rich in romantic
    imagery.
  • Why try to describe it?

6
Charles Baudelaire, The Painter of Modern Life
(1863)
  • Modernity defined
  • Modernity is the transient, the fleeting, the
    contingent
  • It is the one half of art, the other being the
    eternal and the immutable.

7
The End of Modernity and the Post-modern
Condition
  • WN 61
  • modern sunset
  • What constitutes the ominous of this sunset?
  • What would the end of modernity mean?

8
Post-industrial Aesthetics
  • WN 162
  • the sunsets had become almost unbearably
    beautiful
  • Conjunction of
  • The beautiful and the toxic
  • ruddled visionary skyscapes and
  • effluents, pollutants, contaminants, and
    deliriants

9
Romantic Sublime
  • Shelley, Wordsworth
  • Natures awesome beauty
  • Wonder and fear
  • Immanuel Kant, Critique of Aesthetic Judgement
  • Sublime
  • The unspeakable power of nature
  • Inspires awe, terror, dread
  • The limits of the imagination

10
Romantic Sublime
11
Kant, On the Sublime
  • Bold, overhanging, and, as it were, threatening
    rocks clouds piled up in the sky, moving with
    lightening flashes and thunder peals volcanoes
    in all their violence of destruction hurricanes
    with their track of devastation the boundless
    ocean in a state of tumult the lofty waterfall
    of a mighty river -- these exhibit our faculty of
    resistance as insignificantly small in comparison
    with their might. . . We call these object
    sublime because they raise the energies of the
    soul above accustomed height and discover in us a
    faculty of resistance . . . which gives courage
    to measure ourselves against the almightiness of
    nature.
  • Kant, Critique of Aesthetic Judgement, B. XXVIII

12
Boticelli, Birth of Venus
13
Andy WarholBirth of Venus (after Boticelli)
14
Modern Postmodern
  • Irony
  • Form (closed)
  • Purpose
  • Design
  • Hierarchy
  • Creation
  • Synthesis
  • Centering
  • Selection
  • Genital
  • Transcendence
  • Pastiche
  • Antiform (open)
  • Play
  • Chance
  • Anarchy
  • Deconstruction
  • Antithesis
  • Dispersal
  • Combination
  • Androgynous
  • Immanence

15
Postmodern Sublime
  • A realm full of content, feeling, an exalted
    narrative life WN 308-9
  • What is the cause of this Postmodern Sublime?
  • NOT nihilism
  • The necessity of belief

16
Postmodern Technology
  • Technology
  • Commodification of dreams, desires, and the
    unconscious
  • "Technology is our fate, our truth," the novelist
    Don DeLillo writes in the December 2001 issue of
    Harper's magazine. "We don't have to depend on
    God or the prophets or other astonishments. The
    miracle is what we ourselves produce."
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