ABSTRACT

Informed by selected postmodern theories and cultural criticism, this study argues that while American fiction of the 1980s and 1990s bears the outward signs of a return to realism, it also evidences recurring themes of postmodernism, such as alienation, social disintegration, personal despair, historical dislocation, and authorial self-reflexiveness.

chapter |20 pages

Toward Transcendence:

Reading and Writing in Raymond Carver's Fiction

chapter |15 pages

Reading the Landscape:

Richard Ford's New Realism

chapter |17 pages

Beyond Ethnicity:

Realism and Postmodernism in Louise Erdrich's Novels

chapter |9 pages

Epilogue:

An Extended Map Reading of Contemporary American Fiction