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How to Recover Reality. Neo-Romantic Irony in Post-Postmodern American Fiction
Author(s) -
Jesús Bolaño Quintero
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
alfinge
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2386-9658
pISSN - 0213-1854
DOI - 10.21071/arf.v33i.13485
Subject(s) - irony , postmodernism , literature , sincerity , romance , narrative , transcendence (philosophy) , aesthetics , philosophy , postmodernity , realism , art , epistemology , psychology , social psychology
Even though transcendentalism never ceased to be present in American culture, during the first decade of the twenty-first century, the gaze of artists and theorists turned to the ideas of the American Renaissance with a hope that had no place during the reign of postmodern irony. With this in mind, the purpose of this article is to discern the adequacy of Emerson’s philosophy for the recovery of realism through the transcendence of language and a new use of Romantic irony. The previous analysis will take us to the New Sincerity movement. The writers of the generation that followed in the wake of David Foster Wallace’s acted as a bridge between the postmodern and the post-postmodern narrative of the beginning of the new millennium. These young writers based their fiction on a critique of institutionalized irony in order to pave the way for the new post 9/11 novel.

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