Skip to Main Content

Basic Search

Skip to Search Results
 
 
 

Left Column

Filters

Right Column

Search Results

Search Results

(Total results 4)

Mini-Tools

 
 

Search Report

  • 1. Hernon, Hiatt INFINITE JEST 2

    Bachelor of Science of Media Arts and Studies (BSC), Ohio University, 2018, Media Arts and Studies

    INFINITE JEST 2 takes a look at the world of media in 2024. Film available for academic purposes at: https://youtu.be/t1iBihSzgL4 Live show available for academic purposes at: https://youtu.be/k8PPxO_Io9c

    Committee: Brian Plow (Advisor); Beth Novak (Advisor) Subjects: Mass Media; Motion Pictures
  • 2. Hoffman, Yonina The Voices of David Foster Wallace: Comic, Encyclopedic, Sincere

    Doctor of Philosophy, The Ohio State University, 2019, English

    The power and intimacy of Wallace's narrative voices allow him to affect his readers powerfully on multiple levels: cognitively, linguistically, and affectively. The Voices of David Foster Wallace: Comic, Encyclopedic, and Sincere offers a systematic analysis of Wallace's poetics of voice, identifying a dominant voice for each, pinpointing its techniques and influences, and casting it in a career arc of Wallace's evolving novelistic purposes. The careful shaping of voice is central to Wallace's distinctive prose and its impact on contemporary American fiction. The project identifies Wallace's three dominant voices—comic, encyclopedic, and sincere—and shows how voice identifies not just the particular agent communicating with the reader but creates a global atmosphere in texts, deeply shaping our experiences and interpretations. Drawing on and refining James Phelan's model of voice for Wallace's fiction, I define voice as the synthesis of values, tone, style, and rhythm, elements that come together in complex ways to create the gestalt effect of narrative voice. I develop tools for examining the micro elements that create the macro quality of the reading experience—helping illuminate how Wallace uses voice to “rewire” the way readers see and feel, changing our relation to language and to the world. Further, I emphasize the sonic dimension of reading whereby Wallace's sentence and paragraph rhythms impact the cognition of readers, thus joining the recent turn in literary studies toward reading with the grain, by advancing and synthesizing approaches to rhetoric, affect, formalism, and literary phenomenology. The picture of Wallace that emerges from my analysis is one of uncertainty (and ambition) regarding his place in the literary world, a restless desire to add more voices to his repertoire. Adopting comedy, knowledge, and finally emotional depth as his purposes, Wallace progressively widens his ideal audience, reaching readers in a variety of ways in his ongoing pr (open full item for complete abstract)

    Committee: Brian McHale (Advisor); James Phelan (Committee Member); Sandra Macpherson (Committee Member) Subjects: American Literature; Language; Literature
  • 3. Northcraft, Teresa E Unibus Omnem: New Sincerity and Transcendence in David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest

    Bachelor of Arts, University of Toledo, 2018, English

    David Foster Wallace's interest in the duality of irony and sincerity as both a philosophical and literary problem is especially apparent in his 1996 novel Infinite Jest. Responding to the shortcomings of postmodern fiction critically, Wallace's essay, “E Unibus Pluram,” calls for the American literary movement New Sincerity, or post-postmodernism, to provide a viable alternative to the ironic mode's greater existential entrapments. Several scholars have commented on New Sincerity's presence within Infinite Jest, and a consensus suggests that the movement manifests itself in Wallace's general tone––or, as Adam Kelly's scholarship notes, in Wallace's “regular thematic treatment of sincerity” (131). I continue this conversation with a greater focus on characterization, suggesting that the narratives of protagonists Hal Incandenza and Don Gately embody, respectively, the duality of irony and sincerity. Infinite Jest, I contend, successfully uses fiction as a literary medium to engage a philosophical discussion because Wallace offers us characters who are larger than themselves, who embody ideas beyond the novel's invented world. Ultimately, I believe that conversations regarding irony's shortcomings promote the relevance of community and defend the validity of human pain––while also offering us hope: We can transcend adversity. We can find meaning by choosing to cultivate mental discipline for the sake of empathy and altruism.

    Committee: Benjamin Stroud (Advisor); Melissa Gregory (Committee Member); Russ Reising (Committee Member) Subjects: American Literature
  • 4. Walsh, James American Hamlet: Shakespearean Epistemology in Infinite Jest

    Master of Arts in English, Cleveland State University, 2014, College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences

    Infinite Jest has been viewed by champions of its cause as a solution to the defeatist irony of postmodernism and by critics as a postmodern gag in which the reader falls victim to intellectual “jest.” Exploring the text's initial affiliations with Hamlet is a fundamental move toward stabilizing Infinite Jest's status as a sincere and authentic representation of American life at the turn of the twenty-first century. The shattered nature of reality and the “stinking thinking” inherent in addiction are depicted through the narrative structure, in which the time is literally “out of joint,” and the “antic disposition” of various characters who are evocative of both the melancholic and heroic sides of the play's lead. Hamlet operates as a primary textual constraint in which the matrix of plot, device, methodology, and motif intersect and envision one of the Western world's most recognizable stories transposed on 1990s America. Infinite Jest is a closed system in which geometry and literature converge by way of a customized Oulipo method that uses constraint as an improvisatory means to inhabit the space where things “fragment into beauty” (Infinite Jest 81): the glory of infinity.

    Committee: James J. Marino PhD (Advisor); Adam T, Sonstegard PhD (Committee Member); F. Jeff Karem PhD (Committee Member) Subjects: American Literature; Ethics; Language Arts; Philosophy; Spirituality; Theater Studies; Therapy