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Flat-World Fiction: Digital Humanity in Early Twenty-First-Century America

Flat-World Fiction: Digital Humanity in Early Twenty-First-Century America

Current price: $120.95
Publication Date: December 15th, 2021
Publisher:
University of Georgia Press
ISBN:
9780820360553
Pages:
230
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Description

Flat-World Fiction analyzes representations of digital technology and the social and ethical concerns it creates in mainstream literary American fiction and fiction written about the United States in the first two decades of the twenty-first century. In this period, authors such as Don DeLillo, Jennifer Egan, Dave Eggers, Joshua Ferris, Jonathan Safran Foer, Mohsin Hamid, Thomas Pynchon, Kristen Roupenian, Gary Shteyngart, and Zadie Smith found themselves not only implicated in the developing digital world of flat screens but also threatened by it, while simultaneously attempting to critique it. As a result, their texts explore how human relationships with digital devices and media transform human identity and human relationships with one another, history, divinity, capitalism, and nationality.

Liliana M. Naydan walks us through these complex relationships, revealing how authors show through their fiction that technology is political. In the process, these authors complement and expand on work by historians, philosophers, and social scientists, creating accessible, literary road maps to our digital future.

About the Author

LILIANA M. NAYDAN is an associate professor of English at Penn State Abington. She is the author of Rhetorics of Religion in American Fiction: Faith, Fundamentalism, and Fanaticism in the Age of Terror and the coeditor of Out in the Center: Public Controversies and Private Struggles and Terror in Global Narrative: Representations of 9/11 in the Age of Late-Late Capitalism. She lives in the greater Philadelphia area in Pennsylvania.