ABSTRACT

Though David Foster Wallace is well known for declaring that "Fiction’s about what it is to be a fucking human being," what he actually meant by the term "human being" has been quite forgotten. It is a truism in Wallace studies that Wallace was a posthumanist writer, and too theoretically sophisticated to write about characters as having some kind of essential interior self or soul. Though the contemporary, posthuman model of the embodied brain is central to Wallace’s work, so is his critique of that model: the soul is as vital a part of Wallace’s fiction as the bodies in which his souls are housed. Drawing on Wallace’s reading in the science and philosophy of mind, this book gives a rigorous account of Wallace’s dualism, and of his humanistic engagement with key postmodern concerns: authorship; the self and interiority; madness and mind doctors; and free will. If Wallace’s fiction is about what it is to be a human being, this book is about the human ‘I’ at the heart of Wallace’s work.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

“[An] alarmed call to arms”: Cognitive Science, the Humanities, and the End of Postmodernism

chapter 1|30 pages

“It’s much more boneheaded and practical than that”

Authorship and the Body

chapter 2|37 pages

“He’s a ghost haunting his own body”

Cartesian Dualism in Wallace’s Ghost Stories

chapter 3|33 pages

“The heat just past the glass doors”

Therapy, Madness, and Metaphor

chapter 4|32 pages

“(At Least) Three Cheers for Cause and Effect”

Free Will, Addiction, and the Self