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Revision as of 03:08, 15 August 2012
The Literature of Exhaustion is an influential 1967 essay by the American novelist John Barth, which is sometimes considered to be the manifesto of postmodernism.
The essay was highly influential, and for some, controversial. It depicted Literary realism as a "used up" tradition; Barth's description of his own work, which many though that nailed a core trait of postmodernism, is "novels which imitate the form of a novel, by an author who imitates the role of Author".
Barth argued that a particular stage in history was passing, and pointed to possible directions from there. In 1980, he wrote a follow-up essay, The Literature of Replenishment.
Publications
Barth first delivered it in 1967 as a lecture in a Peters Rushton Seminars held at the University of Virginia; then it was first printed in The Atlantic in the same year; since then has been reprinted several times, and included in Barth's non-fiction collection The Friday Book (1984).
References
- in Contemporary Literature, 2000
- "The Literature of Exhaustion". Elab.eserver.org. Retrieved 2012-05-25.
- John Barth (1984) intro to The Literature of Exhaustion, in The Friday Book.
See also
External links
John Barth | |
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Fiction |
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Non-fiction |
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Other | End of the Road |