Library

Browse and search novels

1 novel found

On American Postmodernist Novels (overview of Western Postmodernist Novels)

Chen Shidan Et Al.

242K0

"A Theory of American Postmodernist Novels" reveals that American postmodernist novels use texts intertwined with reality and fiction to effectively express postmodern human experience. While deconstructing and subverting the fictional world, they reconstruct a real world that recognizes differences, respects others, and develops sustainably. Doctorow uses diverse narrative techniques and diverse and mixed text structures to express postmodern left-wing thoughts, criticize the capitalist system, and pursue social justice. DeLillo's series of novels express social themes such as American consumerism, trauma, terrorism, foreign policy, ideology, technology supremacy, financial capital, mass media, and totalitarianism. Auster was keen on creating a series of labyrinthine novels in his novels to reveal the truth of reality and history. Powers actively advocates and constructs the idea of ​​a post-humanistic harmonious society in his works. Coupland's novels pay close attention to popular culture and social issues, perfectly combining cultural criticism with characterization. Donleavy's carnival novel creation presents readers with an uncertain, unstable real world full of weirdness and absurdity.