Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T08:36:01.437Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 May 2019

Joanna Freer
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography

Abbas, Niran (ed.). Thomas Pynchon: Reading from the Margins (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Ahmad, Aijaz. In Theory: Classes, Nations, Literatures (Verso, 1992).Google Scholar
Ahmed, Sara. “Open Forum Imaginary Prohibitions: Some Preliminary Remarks on the Founding Gestures of the ‘New Materialism,’European Journal of Women’s Studies, 15 (2008), doi.org/10.1177/1350506807084854, 2339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, Mary. The Necessary Blankness: Women in Major American Fiction of the Sixties (University of Illinois Press, 1976).Google Scholar
Allington, Daniel, Brouillette, Sarah, and Golumbia, David. “Neoliberal Tools (and Archives): A Political History of Digital Humanities,” Los Angeles Review of Books, May 1, 2016, https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/neoliberal-tools-archives-political-history-digital-humanities/.Google Scholar
Ameriks, Karl. “Introduction: Interpreting German Idealism,” in Ameriks, Karl (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to German Idealism (Cambridge University Press, 2000), 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Cherchez la Femme: The Coercive Paratexts of Thomas Pynchon’s V.,” in Simonetti, Paolo and Rossi, Umberto (eds.), Dream Tonight of Peacock Tails: Essays on the Fiftieth Anniversary of Thomas Pynchon’s V. (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015), 3151.Google Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Distorted Transmissions: Towards a Material Reading of Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49,” Orbis Litterarum, 68.2 (2013), 110–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Judging by the Cover,” Critique, 53.3 (2012), 251–78.Google Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Mapping the World: Thomas Pynchon’s Global Novels,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.1 (2016), http://doi.org/10.16995/orbit.178.Google Scholar
Anderson, Paul Thomas (dir.). Inherent Vice, Warner Bros., 2014.Google Scholar
John, Asafu-Adjaye et al. “An Ecomodernist Manifesto,” Ecomodernism.org, April 2015, https://ecomodernism.org.Google Scholar
Baker, Jeffry S.A Democratic Pynchon: Counterculture, Counterforce, and Participatory Democracy,” Pynchon Notes, 32–33 (1993), 107–12.Google Scholar
Ballard, J. G., and Cott, Jonathan. “The Strange Visions of J. G. Ballard,” Rolling Stone, November 19, 1987, www.rollingstone.com.Google Scholar
Barad, Karen. Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning (Duke University Press, 2007).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barad, Karen. “Posthumanist Performativity: Toward an Understanding of How Matter Comes to Matter,” Signs, 28 (2003), doi.org/10.1086/signs.2003.28.issue-3, 801–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barad, Karen, Dolphijn, Rick, and van der Tuin, Iris. “Interview with Karen Barad,” in New Materialism: Interviews and Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012), 4870.Google Scholar
Baroni, Raphaël. “Tellability,” in Hühn, Peter et al. (eds.), Handbook of Narratology (De Gruyter, 2014), 836–45.Google Scholar
Bazin, André. “The Ontology of the Photographic Image,” trans. by Hugh Gray, Film Quarterly, 13.4 (Summer 1960), 49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belsey, Catherine. Critical Practice (Routledge, 2002).Google Scholar
Benea, Diana. The Political Imagination of Thomas Pynchon’s Later Novels (University of Bucharest Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. “On Some Motifs in Baudelaire,” in Selected Writings, Volume IV, 1938–40 (Belknap Press, 2006), 313–55.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” in Illuminations, trans. by Harry Zohn (Schocken Books, 1968), 253–64.Google Scholar
Bennett, Jane. “A Vitalist Stopover on the Way to a New Materialism,” in Coole, Diana H. and Frost, Samantha (eds.), New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics (Duke University Press, 2010), 4769.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benton, Graham. Unruly Narratives: The Anarchist Dimension in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon (LAP Lambert Academic Publishing, 2012).Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “Coda: How to Read Pynchon,” in Dalsgaard, Inger, Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 168–77.Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “Gravity’s Rainbow: Text as Film – Film as Text,” in Pynchon’s Poetics: Interfacing Theory and Text (University of Illinois Press, 1993), 151–90.Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “How to Read Pynchon,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 168–77.Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “Life on the Beach: The Natural Elements in Thomas Pynchon’s California Trilogy,” in McClintock, Scott and Miller, John (eds.), Pynchon’s California (University of Iowa Press, 2014), 3564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertens, Hans. The Idea of the Postmodern: A History (Routledge, 1995).Google Scholar
Bérubé, Michael. Marginal Forces/Cultural Centers: Tolson, Pynchon, and the Politics of the Canon (Cornell University Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Best, Stephen, and Marcus, Sharon. “Surface Reading: An Introduction,” Representations, 108 (2009), doi.org/10.1525/rep.2009.108.1.1, 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biber, Douglas et al. Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English (Pearson, 1999).Google Scholar
Birke, Dorothee, and Christ, Birte. “Paratext and Digitized Narrative: Mapping the Field,” Narrative, 21.1 (2013), 6587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birkerts, Sven. Changing the Subject: Art and Attention in the Internet Age (Graywolf Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Bogost, Ian. Alien Phenomenology, or What It’s Like to Be a Thing (University of Minnesota Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bookchin, Murray. Our Synthetic Environment, rev. ed. (Harper, 1974).Google Scholar
Bosman, Julie. “After Long Resistance, Pynchon Allows Novels to Be Sold as E-Books,” New York Times, June 12, 2012, https://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/12/after-long-resistance-pynchon-allows-novels-to-be-sold-as-e-books/.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. The Field of Cultural Production (Polity Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Bourriaud, Nicolas. “Altermodern,” in Rudrum, David and Stavris, Nicholas (eds.), Supplanting the Postmodern: An Anthology of Writings on the Arts and Culture of the Early 21st Century (Bloomsbury, 2015), 255–69.Google Scholar
Braidotti, Rosi. Nomadic Subjects: Embodiment and Sexual Difference in Contemporary Feminist Theory (Columbia University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Bray, , Roger, J., and Curtis, J. T.. “An Ordination of the Upland Forest Communities of Southern Wisconsin,” Ecological Monographs, 27.4 (October 1957), 325–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bronfenbrenner, Urie. The Ecology of Human Development: Experiments by Nature and Design (Harvard University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Bryant, John. The Fluid Text: A Theory of Revision and Editing for Book and Screen (University of Michigan Press, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buell, Lawrence. The Environmental Imagination: Thoreau, Nature Writing, and the Formation of American Culture (Harvard University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Bulson, Eric. “Ulysses by the Numbers,” Representations, 127.1 (Summer 2014), 132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bunch, Will. October 1, 2011: The Battle of the Brooklyn Bridge. Kindle.Google Scholar
Burnett, John. “Big Money as Private Immigrant Jails Boom,” National Public Radio, November 21, 2017, www.npr.org/2017/11/21/565318778/big-money-as-private-immigrant-jails-boom.Google Scholar
Burrows, J. F. Computation into Criticism: A Study of Jane Austen’s Novels and An Experiment in Method (Clarendon Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Butler, Judith. Giving an Account of Oneself (Fordham University Press, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
“Cadillac Hearse Art Print,” CruiserArt, no date, www.cruiserart.com/1959_hawaiian-surf-surfer-surfing-art.htm.Google Scholar
Callens, Johan. “Tubed Out and Movie Shot in Pynchon’s Vineland,” Pynchon Notes, 28–29 (1991), 115–41.Google Scholar
Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring (Houghton Mifflin, 1962).Google Scholar
Carswell, Sean. Occupy Pynchon: Politics after Gravity’s Rainbow (University of Georgia Press, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cato, Molly Scott. The Bioregional Economy: Land, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness (Routledge, 2013).Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. “Postcolonial Studies and the Challenge of Climate Change,” New Literary History, 43.2 (2012), 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Alenda. “Environmental Remediation,” electronic book review, July 6, 2015, www.electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/remediation.Google Scholar
Chapman, Wes. “Male Pro-feminism and the Masculinist Gigantism of Gravity’s Rainbow,” Postmodern Culture, 6.3 (1996), n.p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chetwynd, Ali. “Inherent Obligation: The Distinctive Difficulties in and of Recent Pynchon,” English Studies, 95.8 (2014), 923–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chetwynd, Ali. Review of Inger H. Dalsgaard, Luc Herman, and Brian McHale (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon, College Literature, 39.4 (Fall 2012), 142–45.Google Scholar
Chetwynd, Ali, Freer, Joanna, and Maragos, Georgios (eds.). Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender (University of Georgia Press, 2018).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cichosz, Maria. “Postmodern Allegory and 1960s Melancholy in Pynchon’s Inherent Vice,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 58.5 (2017), 521–37.Google Scholar
City of New York Parks and Recreation. “Street Trees for New York City,” http://www.nycgovparks.org/sub_your_park/trees_greenstreets/images/street_trees_for_nyc.pdf.Google Scholar
Clerc, Charles. “Film in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Approaches to Teaching Gravity’s Rainbow (Ohio State University Press, 1983), 103–50.Google Scholar
Clover, Joshua. “Autumn of the System: Poetry and Financial Capital,” Journal of Narrative Theory, 41.1 (2011), 3452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coffman, Christopher K. “Bogomilism, Orphism, Shamanism: The Spiritual and Spatial Grounds of Pynchon’s Ecological Ethic,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 91114.Google Scholar
Cohen, Jeffrey J., and Stephanie, LeMenager. “Introduction,” PMLA, 131.2 (2016), 340–46.Google Scholar
Connolly, William E. “The ‘New Materialism’ and the Fragility of Things,” Millennium, 41 (2013), 399412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coole, Diana H., and Frost, Samantha (eds.) New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics (Duke University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Cooper, Peter L. Signs and Symptoms: Thomas Pynchon and the Contemporary World (University of California Press, 1983).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cornell, Andrew. Unruly Equality: US Anarchism in the Twentieth Century (University of California Press, 2016).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowart, David. “‘Down on the Barroom Floor of History’: Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge,” Postmodern Culture, 24 (2013), n.p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowart, David. “Pynchon, Genealogy, History: Against the Day,” Modern Philology, 109.3 (2012), 385407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowart, David. “Pynchon and the Sixties,” Critique, 41.1 (Fall 1999), 312.Google Scholar
Cowart, David. Thomas Pynchon: The Art of Allusion (Southern Illinois University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Cowart, David. Thomas Pynchon and the Dark Passages of History (University of Georgia Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Cubitt, Sean. Finite Media: Environmental Implications of Digital Technologies (Duke University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Currie, Mark. About Time: Narrative, Fiction and the Philosophy of Time (Edinburgh University Press, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalsgaard, Inger H. “Gravity’s Rainbow: ‘A Historical Novel of a Whole New Sort,’” Pynchon Notes, 50–51 (Spring–Fall 2002), 3550.Google Scholar
Dalsgaard, Inger H.Readers and Trespassers: Time Travel, Orthogonal Time, and Alternative Figurations of Time in Against the Day,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 115–38.Google Scholar
Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian, “Introduction,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 19.Google Scholar
Darlington, Joseph. “Capitalist Mysticism and the Historicizing of 9/11 in Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 57.3 (2016), 242–53.Google Scholar
Davidson, Cathy N., and Goldberg, David Theo. “Engaging the Humanities,” Profession (2004), 4262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Noela. “New Materialism and Feminism’s Anti-biologism: A Response to Sara Ahmed,” European Journal of Women’s Studies, 16 (2009), doi.org/10.1177/1350506808098535, 6780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Bourcier, Simon. Pynchon and Relativity: Narrative Time in Thomas Pynchon’s Later Novels (Continuum, 2012).Google Scholar
De Bourcier, Simon. “Reading McHale Reading Pynchon, or, Is Pynchon Still a Postmodernist?,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 2.2 (2014), doi.org/10.7766/orbit.v2.2.68.Google Scholar
DeLanda, Manuel. A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History (Zone Books, 1997).Google Scholar
DeLanda, Manuel, Dolphijn, Rick, and Tuin, Iris van der. “Interview with Manuel DeLanda,” in New Materialism: Interviews & Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012), 3847.Google Scholar
Deleuze, Gilles, and Guattari, Félix. Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (Continuum, 2004).Google Scholar
Deleuze, Gilles, and Guattari, Félix. What Is Philosophy?, trans. by Hugh Tomlinson and Graham Burchell (Columbia University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Dolphijn, Rick, and van der Tuin, Iris, New Materialism: Interviews & Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dornberger, Walter. V2, trans. by James Cleugh and Geoffrey Halliday (Hurst and Blackett, 1954).Google Scholar
Dubos, René. Man Adapting (Yale University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Duyfhuizen, Bernard. “‘A Suspension Forever at the Hinge of Doubt’: The Reader-trap of Bianca in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Postmodern Culture, 1.2 (September 1991), n.p.Google Scholar
Duyfhuizen, Bernard. “From Potsdam to Putzi’s: Can Slothrop Get There in Time? And, in Time for What?Pynchon Notes, 51–52 (September 2002), 5175.Google Scholar
Edelman, Lee. No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive (Duke University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Elias, Amy J. “History,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 123–35.Google Scholar
Elias, Amy J.Plots, Pilgrimage, and the Politics of Genre in Against the Day,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 2946.Google Scholar
Esche, Charles, Papastergiadis, Nikos, and Ranciè, Jacquesre. “Assemblies in Art and Politics: An Interview with Jacques Rancière,” Theory, Culture & Society, 31.7/8 (2014), 2741.Google Scholar
Eve, Martin Paul. Pynchon and Philosophy: Wittgenstein, Foucault and Adorno (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eve, Martin Paul. “Visualizing Gravity’s Rainbow,” Martin Paul Eve, June 7, 2015, www.martineve.com/2015/06/07/visualizing-gravitys-rainbow/.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagan, Madeleine. Ethics and Politics after Poststructuralism: Levinas, Derrida, and Nancy (Edinburgh University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Fan, Christopher T. “Melancholy Transcendence: Ted Chiang and Asian American Postracial Form,” Post45, November 5, 2014, post45.research.yale.edu/2014/11/melancholy-transcendence-ted-chiang-and-asian-american-postracial-form.Google Scholar
Farrell, John. Paranoia and Modernity: Cervantes to Rousseau (Cornell University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Felski, Rita. The Limits of Critique (University of Chicago Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Felski, Rita. “Suspicious Minds,” Poetics Today, 32.2 (2011), 215–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fish, Stanley. “Mind Your P’s and B’s: The Digital Humanities and Interpretation,” New York Times, January 23, 2012, https://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/23/mind-your-ps-and-bs-the-digital-humanities-and-interpretation/.Google Scholar
Fish, Stanley. “What Is Stylistics, and Why Are They Saying Such Terrible Things about It?,” in Is There a Text in This Class?: The Authority of Interpretive Communities (Harvard University Press, 1980), 6896.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen. The Anxiety of Obsolescence: The American Novel in the Age of Television (Vanderbilt University Press, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fjellestad, Danuta, and Watson, David. “The Futures of American Literature,” Studia Neophilologica, 87 (2015), 17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flood, Alison. “Thousands of Authors Opt Out of Google Book Settlement,” The Guardian, February 23, 2010, www.theguardian.com/books/2010/feb/23/authors-opt-out-google-book-settlement.Google Scholar
Foerster, Heinz von. Understanding Understanding: Essays on Cybernetics and Cognition (Springer, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franco, Marie. “Queer Postmodern Practices: Sex and Narrative in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Twentieth-Century Literature, 63.2 (2017), 141–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franco, Marie. “Queer Sex, Queer Text: S/M in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Chetwynd, Ali, Freer, Joanna, and Maragos, Georgios (eds.), Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender (University of Georgia Press, 2018), 88108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frangipane, Nicholas. “Freeways and Fog: The Shift in Attitude between Postmodernism and Post-postmodernism from The Crying of Lot 49 to Inherent Vice,” Critique, 57.5 (2016), 521–32.Google Scholar
Freer, Joanna. Thomas Pynchon and American Counterculture (Cambridge University Press, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freer, Joanna. “Is Pynchon a Feminist?,” Berfrois, June 9, 2011, www.berfrois.com/2011/06/thomas-pynchon-relative-feminist-by-joanna-freer/.Google Scholar
Freer, Joanna. “Thomas Pynchon and the Black Panther Party: Revolutionary Suicide in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Journal of American Studies, 47.1 (February 2013), 171–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedberg, Anne. “The End of Cinema: Multimedia and Technological Change,” in Gledhill, Christine and Williams, Linda (eds.), Reinventing Film Studies (Arnold, 2000), 438–52.Google Scholar
Gautreau, Justin. “‘Clearer than Real’: A History of Mediated Realities in Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Genre, 47.2 (2014), 141–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gazi, Jeesha. “Mapping the Metaphysics of the Multiverse in Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Critique, 57.1 (2016), 8093.Google Scholar
Gazzaley, Adam, and Rosen, Larry D.. The Distracted Mind: Ancient Brains in a High-Tech World (MIT Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Geier, Thom. “Thomas Pynchon Speaks! Author Lends His Voice to ‘Inherent Vice’ Trailer,” Entertainment Weekly, August 11, 2009, https://ew.com/article/2009/08/11/thomas-pynchon-speaks-inherent-vice-trailer/.Google Scholar
Genette, Gérard. Paratexts: Thresholds of Interpretation (Cambridge University Press, 1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giesler, Loren J. “Purple Seed Stain and Cercospora Blight,” Cropwatch, University of Nebraska–Lincoln Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, https://cropwatch.unl.edu/plantdisease/soybean/purple-seed-stain.Google Scholar
Gitlin, Todd. Occupy Nation: The Roots, the Spirit, and the Promise of Occupy Wall Street (It Books, 2012).Google Scholar
Gitlin, Todd. The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage (Bantam, 1987).Google Scholar
Goldberg, David Theo. The Threat of Race: Reflections on Racial Neoliberalism (Blackwell, 2009).Google Scholar
Gourley, James. Terrorism and Temporality in the Works of Thomas Pynchon and Don DeLillo (Bloomsbury, 2013).Google Scholar
Graeber, David. “The New Anarchists,” New Left Review, 13 (January/February 2002), 6173.Google Scholar
Grassian, Daniel. Hybrid Fictions: American Literature and Generation X (McFarland, 2003).Google Scholar
Greenberg, Alvin. “The Underground Woman: An Excursion into the V-ness of Thomas Pynchon,” Chelsea, 27 (1969), 5865.Google Scholar
Grosz, Elizabeth. “Thinking the New: Of Futures Yet Unthought,” in Grosz, Elizabeth (ed.), Becomings: Explorations in Time, Memory, and Futures (Cornell University Press, 1999), 1528.Google Scholar
Gussow, Mel. “Pynchon’s Letters Nudge His Mask,” New York Times, March 4, 1998, www.nytimes.com/1998/03/04/books/pynchon-s-letters-nudge-his-mask.html.Google Scholar
Hadjioannou, Markos. From Light to Byte: Toward an Ethics of Digital Cinema (University of Minnesota Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haenni, Sabine. The Immigrant Scene: Ethnic Amusements in New York, 1880–1920 (University of Minnesota Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Haeselin, David. “Welcome to the Indexed World: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge and The Things Search Engines Will Not Find,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 58.4 (2017), 313–24.Google Scholar
Haferkamp, Leyla. “‘Particle or Wave’: The ‘Function’ of the Prairie in Against the Day,” in Pöhlmann, Sascha (ed.), Against the Grain: Reading Pynchon’s Counternarratives (Rodopi, 2010), 307–22.Google Scholar
Hajdu, David. Positively 4th Street: The Lives and Times of Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez Fariña, and Richard Fariña (Picador, 2001).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna. The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness (Prickly Paradigm, 2003).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna. “Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective,” Feminist Studies, 14 (1988), doi.org/10.2307/3178066, 575–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haraway, Donna. When Species Meet (University of Minnesota Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Hardack, Richard. “Consciousness without Borders: Narratology in Against the Day and the Work of Thomas Pynchon,” Criticism, 52.1 (2010), 91128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardt, Michael, and Negri, Antonio. Empire (Harvard University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Hardt, Michael and Negri, Antonio. Multitude (Penguin, 2004).Google Scholar
Harris, Michael. “Pynchon’s Postcoloniality,” in Abbas, Niran (ed.), Thomas Pynchon: Reading from the Margins (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2003), 197214.Google Scholar
Hasan, Medhi. “Barack Obama: The Deporter-in-Chief,” Al Jazeera, January 14, 2017, www.aljazeera.com.Google Scholar
Hassan, Ihab. “Toward a Concept of Postmodernism,” in The Postmodern Turn: Essays in Postmodern Theory and Culture (Ohio State University Press, 1987), 8496.Google Scholar
Hawthorne, Mark D. “A ‘Hermaphrodite Sort of Deity’: Sexuality, Gender, and Gender Blending in Thomas Pynchon’s V.” Studies in the Novel, 29.1 (1997), 7493.Google Scholar
Hayles, N. Katherine. How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis (University of Chicago Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayles, N. Katherine. “Hyper and Deep Attention: The Generational Divide in Cognitive Modes,” Profession (2007), 188–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heilemann, John. “2012 = 1968?,” New York Magazine, November 27, 2011, nymag.com/news/politics/occupy-wall-street-2011–12/.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc. “Introduction: Approach and Avoid,” Pynchon Notes, 42–43 (1998), 911.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc. “Storyworld and Historiographic Metafiction: Belgium in Against the Day,” in Chorier-Fryd, Bénédicte and Chamerois, Gilles (eds.), Thomas Pynchon (Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée, 2013), 173–91.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc, and Vervaeck, Bart. “Narrative Interest as Cultural Negotiation,” Narrative, 17 (2009), 111–29.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc, and Vervaeck, Bart. “Negotiating the Paranoia Narrative: The Critical Reception of Bleeding Edge (2013) by Thomas Pynchon,” Anglia, 134.1 (2016), 88112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herman, Luc, Hogenraad, Robert, and Wim Van, Mierlo. “Pynchon, Postmodernism, and Quantification: An Empirical Content Analysis of Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow,” Language and Literature, 12.1 (2003), 2741.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herman, Luc, and Weisenburger, Steven. Gravity’s Rainbow, Domination, and Freedom (University of Georgia Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hinds, Elizabeth Jane Wall. The Multiple Worlds of Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon: Eighteenth-Century Contexts, Postmodern Observations (Camden House, 2005).Google Scholar
Hite, Molly. Ideas of Order in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon (Ohio State University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Hite, Molly. “When Pynchon Was a Boys’ Club: V. and Midcentury Mystifications of Gender,” in Chetwynd, Ali, Freer, Joanna, and Maragos, Georgios (eds.), Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender (Georgia University Press, 2018), 316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
hooks, bell. Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Huehls, Mitchum. “The Great Flattening,” Contemporary Literature, 54.4 (2013), 861–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, Kathryn. “Attenuated Realities: Pynchon’s Trajectory from V. to Inherent Vice,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 2 (2013), doi.org/10.7766/orbit.v2.1.50.Google Scholar
Hume, Kathryn. “Pynchon’s Alternate Realities from V. to Inherent Vice,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 2.1 (2013), https://orbit.openlibhums.org/article/doi/10.7766/orbit.v2.1.50/.Google Scholar
Hutcheon, Linda. The Politics of Postmodernism, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ickstadt, Heinz. “History, Utopia, and Transcendence in the Space-Time of Against the Day,” Pynchon Notes, 54–55 (2008), doi.org/10.16995/pn.37, 216–44.Google Scholar
Jackson, Richard. “The Epistemological Crisis of Counter-terrorism,” Critical Studies on Terrorism, 8.1 (2015), 3354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarvis, Michael. “Pynchon’s Deep Web,” Los Angeles Review of Books, September 12, 2013, https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/pynchons-deep-web.Google Scholar
Jarvis, Michael. “Very Nice Indeed: Cyprian Latewood’s Masochistic Sublime, and the Religious Pluralism of Against the Day,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 1 (2013), doi.org/10.7766/orbit.v1.2.45.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Henry. “Transmedia Storytelling 101,” Confessions of an ACA-Fan, March 21, 2007, henryjenkins.org/2007/03/transmedia_storytelling_101.html.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Henry, Ford, Sam, and Green, Joshua. Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture (New York University Pres, 2013).Google Scholar
Jingo, Neddie. “Tibetan Ampersands,” Chumps of Choice, December 7, 2006, chumpsofchoice.blogspot.dk/2006/12/tibetan-ampersands.html.Google Scholar
Jockers, Matthew L. Text Analysis with R for Students of Literature (Springer International, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnston, John. “Mediality in Vineland and Neuromancer,” in Tabbi, Joseph and Wutz, Michael (eds.), Reading Matters: Narrative in the New Media Ecology (Cornell University Press, 1997), 173–92.Google Scholar
Jones, Steven E. Against Technology: From the Luddites to Neo-Luddism (Routledge, 2006).Google Scholar
Käkelä-Puumala, Tiina. “‘There Is Money Everywhere’: Representation, Authority, and the Money Form in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Critique, 43 (2013), 147–60.Google Scholar
Kaufman, Marjorie. “Brünnhilde and the Chemists: Women in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 197227.Google Scholar
Kellogg, Carolyn. “Thomas Pynchon’s Playlist,” Los Angeles Times, August 10, 2009, https://latimesblogs.latimes.com/jacketcopy/2009/08/pynchons-playlist.html.Google Scholar
Kim, Sue J. Critiquing Postmodernism in Contemporary Discourses of Race (Palgrave, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Sue J.Racial Neoliberalism and Whiteness in Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Platt, Len and Upstone, Sara (eds.), Postmodern Literature and Race (Cambridge University Press, 2015), 264–78.Google Scholar
Kirby, Alan. Digimodernism: How New Technologies Dismantle the Postmodern and Reconfigure Our Culture (Bloomsbury, 2009).Google Scholar
Kirby, Alan. “Successor States to an Empire in Free Fall,” Times Higher Education, May 27, 2010, www.timeshighereducation.com/features/successor-states-to-an-empire-in-free-fall/411731.article.Google Scholar
Kirkpatrick, Jennet. “Introduction: Selling Out? Solidarity and Choice in the American Feminist Movement,” Perspectives on Politics, 8.1 (2010), 241–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirschenbaum, Matthew G. “What Is Digital Humanities, and What’s It Doing in English Departments?ADE Bulletin, 150 (2010), 17.Google Scholar
Kopp, Manfred. Triangulating Thomas Pynchon’s Eighteenth-Century World: Theory, Structure, and Paranoia in Mason & Dixon (Die Blaue Eule, 2004).Google Scholar
Kurutz, Steven. “Yup, It’s Him: A Pynchon Mystery Solved,” Wall Street Journal, August 11, 2009, https://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2009/08/11/pynchon-revealed/.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno. “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam? From Matters of Fact to Matters of Concern,” Critical Inquiry, 30 (2004), 225–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leise, Christopher. “Introduction: ‘Exceeding the Usual Three Dimensions’: Collective Visions of the Unsuspected,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 111.Google Scholar
Leopold, Aldo. A Sand County Almanac (Oxford University Press, 1949).Google Scholar
Letzler, David. The Cruft of Fiction: Mega-novels and the Science of Paying Attention (University of Nebraska Press, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Letzler, David. “How to Read Bad Books by Great Authors: A Review of Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge,” The Writing Disorder, 2014, www.thewritingdisorder.com/nonfiction-david-letzler.html.Google Scholar
Letzler, David. “A Phenomenology of the Present: Toward a Digital Understanding of Gravity’s Rainbow,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.2 (August 2016), 132.Google Scholar
Leverenz, David. “On Trying to Read Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 229–50.Google Scholar
Levine, George. “Risking the Moment: Anarchy and Possibility in Pynchon’s Fiction,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 113–36.Google Scholar
Lifshey, Adam. Specters of Conquest: Indigenous Absence in Transatlantic Literatures (Fordham University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Liner, James. “Utopia and Debt in Postmodernity; or, Time Management in Inherent Vice,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.1 (2016), https://orbit.openlibhums.org/article/doi/10.16995/orbit.174/.Google Scholar
Ling, Huping, and Austin, Allan. Asian American History and Culture: An Encyclopedia (Routledge, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Link, E. C.Luddism in ‘Under the Rose,’Pynchon Notes, 30–31 (1992), 157–64.Google Scholar
Locke, Richard. “One of the Longest, Most Difficult, Most Ambitious Novels in Years,” New York Times, March 11, 1973, archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/05/18/reviews/pynchon-rainbow.html?_r=2.Google Scholar
Lord, Geoffrey. Postmodernism and Notions of National Difference: A Comparison of Postmodern Fiction in Britain and America (Rodopi, 1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lorenz, Edward N. The Essence of Chaos (University of Washington Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Lorey, Isabell. “The 2011 Occupy Movements: Rancière and the Crisis of Democracy,” Theory, Culture & Society, 31.7/8 (2014), 4365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marcus, Ben. “Why Experimental Fiction Threatens to Destroy Publishing, Jonathan Franzen, and Life as We Know It: A Correction,” Harper’s Magazine, October 2005, 3952.Google Scholar
Marshall, Peter. Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism (PM Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Martin, Tim. Review of Against the Day, by Thomas Pynchon, The Independent, November 26, 2006.Google Scholar
Mathijs, Ernest. “Reel to Real: Film History in Pynchon’s Vineland,” Literature/Film Quarterly, 29.1 (2001), 6270.Google Scholar
May, Todd. The Political Philosophy of Poststructuralist Anarchism (Penn State University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
McCann, Sean, and Szalay, Michael. “Do You Believe in Magic?: Literary Thinking after the New Left,” The Yale Journal of Criticism, 18. 2 (2005), 435–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClintock, Anne. Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest (Routledge, 1995).Google Scholar
McClure, David. “Distributions of Words across Narrative Time in 27,266 Novels,” DM, July 8, 2017, dclure.org/labs/distributions-of-words-27k-novels/.Google Scholar
McClure, David. “Literary MRI’s (or, Tuning Textplot),” DM, May 20, 2015, dclure.org/logs/tuning-textplot/.Google Scholar
McClure, David. “(Mental) Maps of Texts,” DM, September 24, 2014, dclure.org/essays/mental-maps-of-texts/.Google Scholar
McClure, John. “Do They Believe in Magic? Politics and Postmodern Literature,” boundary 2, 36.2 (2009), 125–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCracken, Ellen. “Expanding Genette’s Epitext/Peritext Model for Transitional Electronic Literature: Centrifugal and Centripetal Vectors on Kindles and iPads,” Narrative, 21.1 (2013), 105–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGurl, Mark. “Critical Response II: ‘Neither Indeed Could I Forbear Smiling at Myself,’” Critical Inquiry, 39.3 (2013), 632–38.Google Scholar
McGurl, Mark. “The Posthuman Comedy,” Critical Inquiry, 38.3 (2012), 533–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Change of Dominant from Modernist to Postmodernist Writing,” in Fokkema, Douwe and Bertens, Hans (eds.), Approaching Postmodernism: Papers Presented at a Workshop on Postmodernism, Utrecht Publications in General and Comparative Literature, 21 (John Benjamins, 1986), 5379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Genre as History: Genre-Poaching in Against the Day,” Genre, 42.3–4 (2009), doi.org/10.1215/00166928–42-3–4-5, 520.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Genre as History: Pynchon’s Genre-Poaching,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 1528.Google Scholar
McHale, Brian. Postmodernist Fiction (Routledge, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Pynchon’s Postmodernism,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 97111.Google Scholar
McHale, Brian. “What Was Postmodernism?” electronic book review, December 20, 2007, www.electronicbookreview.com/thread/fictionspresent/tense.Google Scholar
McHugh, Patrick. “Cultural Politics, Postmodernism, and White Guys: Affect in Gravity’s Rainbow,” College Literature, 28.2 (Spring 2001), 128.Google Scholar
McLaughlin, Robert L. “Franz Pökler’s Anti-story: Narrative and Self in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Pynchon Notes, 40–41 (Spring–Fall 1997), 159–75.Google Scholar
Meeks, Elijah, and Weingart, Scott (eds.). Special issue, Journal of Digital Humanities, 2.1 (Winter 2012).Google Scholar
Meillassoux, Quentin. After Finitude: An Essay on the Necessity of Contingency, trans. by Ray Brassier (Continuum, 2009).Google Scholar
Meillassoux, Quentin, Dolphijn, Rick, and Tuin, Iris van der. “Interview with Quentin Meillasoux,” in New Materialism: Interviews & Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012), 7181.Google Scholar
Melley, Timothy. Empire of Conspiracy: The Culture of Paranoia in Postwar America (Cornell University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Mendoza, Breny. “Coloniality of Gender and Power: From Postcoloniality to Decoloniality,” in Disch, Lisa and Hawkesworth, Mary (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Theory (Oxford University Press, 2016), 100–21.Google Scholar
Miller, James A. Democracy Is in the Streets: From Port Huron to the Siege of Chicago (Simon and Schuster, 1987).Google Scholar
Milliot, Jim. “As E-Book Sales Decline, Digital Fatigue Grows,” Publishers Weekly, June 17, 2016, www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/digital/retailing/article/70696-as-e-book-sales-decline-digital-fatigue-grows.html.Google Scholar
Mohanty, Chandra. “Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses,” boundary 2, 12.3–13.1 (Spring–Autumn 1984), 333–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molloy, Seán. “Escaping the Politics of Irredeemable Earth: Anarchy and Transcendence in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon,” Theory & Event, 13.3 (2010), n.p.Google Scholar
Moore, Thomas. “Gravity’s Rainbow as the Incredible Moving Film,” in The Style of Connectedness: Gravity’s Rainbow and Thomas Pynchon (University of Missouri Press, 1987), 3062.Google Scholar
Moraru, Christian. Cosmodernism: American Narrative, Late Globalization, and the New Cultural Imaginary (University of Michigan Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Morton, Timothy. Ecology without Nature: Rethinking Environmental Aesthetics (Harvard University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Moya, Paula, and Markus, Hazel, (eds.). Doing Race: 21 Essays for the 21st Century (Norton, 2010).Google Scholar
Murray, Padmini Ray, and Squires, Claire. “The Digital Publishing Communications Circuit,” Book 2.0, 3.1 (2013), 323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muth, Katie. “The Grammars of the System: Thomas Pynchon at Boeing,” in Freer, Joanna and Haynes, Doug (eds.), “Pynchonomics,” special issue, Textual Practice (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Naveh, Danny, and Bird-David, Nurit. “Animism, Conservation, and Immediacy,” in Harvey, Graham (ed.), The Handbook of Contemporary Animism (Routledge, 2013), 2737.Google Scholar
Neufeld, Michael J. The Rocket and the Reich: Peenemünde and the Coming of the Ballistic Missile Era (Harvard University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Newman, Saul. Unstable Universalities: Poststructuralism and Radical Politics (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. “New York City Street Tree Map,” https://tree-map.nycgovparks.org/#speciesId-71298.Google Scholar
North, Paul. The Problem of Distraction (Stanford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
O’Bryan, Michael. “In Defense of Vineland: Pynchon, Anarchism, and the New Left,” Twentieth-Century Literature, 62.1 (March 2016), 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Donnell, Patrick. Latent Destinies: Cultural Paranoia and Contemporary US Narrative (Duke University Press, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olster, Stacey. The Trash Phenomenon: Contemporary Literature, Popular Culture, and the Making of the American Century (University of Georgia Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Olster, Stacey. “When You’re a (Nin)jette, You’re a (Nin)jette All the Way – or Are You?: Female Filmmaking in Vineland,” in Green, Geoffrey, Greiner, Donald J., and McCaffery, Larry (eds.), The Vineland Papers: Critical Takes on Pynchon’s Novel (Dalkey Archive, 1994), 119–34.Google Scholar
Omi, Michael, and Winant, Howard. Racial Formation in the United States: From the 1960s to the 1990s, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 1994).Google Scholar
Palmeri, Frank. “Other than Postmodern? – Foucault, Pynchon, Hybridity, Ethics,” Postmodern Culture, 12.1 (2001), http://pmc.iath.virginia.edu/issue.901/12.1palmeri.html.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parikka, Jussi. A Geology of Media (University of Minnesota Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pedregosa, Fabian et al. “Scikit-learn: Machine Learning in Python,” JMLR, 12 (2011), 2825–30.Google Scholar
Perec, Georges. The Machine, trans. by Ulrich Schönherr, Review of Contemporary Fiction, 29.1 (Spring 2009), 3393.Google Scholar
Perec, Georges, and Mortley, Kaye. “The Doing of Fiction,” Review of Contemporary Fiction, 29.1 (Spring 2009), 94–101.Google Scholar
Pettman, Dominic. Infinite Distraction: Paying Attention to Social Media (Polity, 2016).Google Scholar
Piekarski, Krzysztof et al. “Mapping, the Unmappable, and Pynchon’s Antitragic Vision,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 4766.Google Scholar
Plater, William M. The Grim Phoenix: Reconstructing Thomas Pynchon (Indiana University Press, 1978).Google Scholar
Pöhlmann, Sascha. “The Complex Text,” in Pöhlmann, Sascha (ed.), Against the Grain: Reading Pynchon’s Counternarratives (Rodopi, 2010), 934.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pöhlmann, Sascha. “‘I Just Look at Books’: Reading the Monetary Metareality of Bleeding Edge,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.1 (2016), https://orbit.openlibhums.org/article/doi/10.16995/orbit.189/.Google Scholar
Pratt, Geraldine, and Rosner, Victoria. The Global and the Intimate: Feminism in Our Time (Columbia University Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Punday, Daniel. Writing at the Limit: The Novel in the New Media Ecology (University of Nebraska Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. “Introduction,” in Orwell, George, Nineteen Eighty-Four (Penguin, 2003), vxxv.Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. “Introduction,” in Dodge, Jim, Stone Junction (Canongate, 1997).Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. “Is It O.K. to Be a Luddite?” New York Times, October 28, 1984, www.nytimes.com/books/97/05/18/reviews/pynchon-luddite.html.Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. Letter to Candida Donadio, April 1964.Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. Letter to Cork Smith, February 23, 1962 (held by the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, the University of Texas at Austin).Google Scholar
Ramsay, Stephen. Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism (University of Illinois Press, 2011).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsay, Stephen. “Stanley and Me,” Stephen Ramsay, November 8, 2012, http://web.archive.org/web/20170517223144/http://stephenramsay.us/text/2012/11/08/stanley-and-me.Google Scholar
Rancière, Jacques. Disagreement (1995), trans. by Julie Rose (University of Minnesota Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Rockhill, Gabriel. “Translator’s Introduction,” in Rancière, Jacques, The Politics of Aesthetics (Continuum, 2004), 16.Google Scholar
Rodowick, David N. The Virtual Life of Film (Harvard University Press, 2007).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rorty, Richard. Achieving Our Country (Harvard University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Rosenbaum, Jonathan. “One Man’s Meat Is Another Man’s Poisson,” Village Voice, March 29, 1973, www.jonathanrosenbaum.net/1973/03/one-mans-meat-is-another-mans-poisson/.Google Scholar
Ross, Christine. The Past Is the Present; It’s the Future Too: The Temporal Turn in Contemporary Art (Continuum, 2012).Google Scholar
Rowberry, Simon Peter. “Reassessing the Gravity’s Rainbow Pynchon Wiki: A New Research Paradigm?Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 1.1 (2012), 125.Google Scholar
Rudrum, David, and Stavris, Nicholas. “Introduction,” in Rudrum, David and Stavris, Nicholas (eds.), Supplanting the Postmodern: An Anthology of Writings on the Arts and Culture of the Early 21st Century (Bloomsbury, 2015), xixxix.Google Scholar
Ryan, Marie-Laure. “Tellability,” in Herman, David, Jahn, Manfred, and Ryan, Marie-Laure (eds.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Narrative Theory (Routledge, 2005), 589–91.Google Scholar
Saint-Amour, Paul. Tense Future: Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form (Oxford University Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saldívar, Ramón. “Imagining Cultures: The Transnational Imaginary in Postrace America,” Journal of Transnational American Studies, 4 (2012), 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saldívar, Ramón. “The Second Elevation of the Novel: Race, Form, and the Postrace Aesthetic in Contemporary Narrative,” Narrative, 21 (2013), 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sale, Kirkpatrick. Rebels against the Future: The Luddites and Their War on the Industrial Revolution (Addison-Wesley, 1995).Google Scholar
Sale, Kirkpatrick. SDS (Random House, 1973).Google Scholar
Samuels, Lisa, and Jerome, McGann. “Deformance and Interpretation,” New Literary History, 30.1 (Winter 1999), 2556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samuels, Robert. New Media, Cultural Studies, and Critical Theory after Postmodernism: Automodernity from Žižek to Laclau (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaub, Thomas H. “Preface,” in Schaub, Thomas H. (ed.), Approaches to Teaching Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49 and Other Works (The Modern Language Association of America, 2008), ixxiii.Google Scholar
Schaub, Thomas H. Pynchon: The Voice of Ambiguity (University of Illinois Press, 1981).Google Scholar
Schroeder, Ralph, and den Besten, Matthijs L.. “Literary Sleuths Online: e-Research Collaboration on the Pynchon Wiki,” Information, Communication & Society, 11.2 (January 2008), 2545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scranton, Roy. Learning to Die in the Anthropocene: Reflections on the End of a Civilization (City Lights, 2015).Google Scholar
Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity (Duke University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Seligman, Scott D. Tong Wars: The Untold Story of Vice, Money, and Murder in New York’s Chinatown (Penguin, 2016).Google Scholar
Severs, Jeffrey. “‘The abstractions she was instructed to embody’: Women, Capitalism, and Artistic Representation in Against the Day,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 215238.Google Scholar
Severs, Jeffrey. “‘A Terrible Inertia’: Thomas Pynchon’s Cold War History of 9/11 and the War on Terror in Bleeding Edge,” in Pope, Heather E. and Bryan, Victoria M. (eds.), Reflecting 9/11: New Narratives in Literature, Television, Film, and Theatre (Cambridge Scholars Press, 2016), 7796.Google Scholar
Shear, Michael D., and Liptak, Adam. “Taking Up Case, Justices Let U.S. Start Travel Ban,” New York Times, June 27, 2017, A1.Google Scholar
Siebers, Tobin. Cold War Criticism and the Politics of Skepticism (Oxford University Press, 1993).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siegel, Jason. “Meatspace Is Cyberspace: The Pynchonian Posthuman in Bleeding Edge,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.2 (2016), 127, doi.org/10.16995/orbit.187.Google Scholar
Silvester, Jeremy, and Gewald, Jan-Bart. Words Cannot Be Found: German Colonial Rule in Namibia: An Annotated Reprint of the 1918 Blue Book (Brill, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simmon, Scott. “Beyond the Theater of War: Gravity’s Rainbow as Film,” Literature/Film Quarterly, 6 (1978), 347–63.Google Scholar
Simonetti, Paolo. “Historical Fiction after 9/11: Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Modern Language Studies, 41 (2011), 2641.Google Scholar
Siu, Paul. The Chinese Laundrymen: A Study of Social Isolation (New York University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Smith, Shawn. Pynchon and History: Metahistorical Rhetoric and Postmodern Narrative Form in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon (Routledge, 2005).Google Scholar
Smucker, Jonathan. Hegemony How-To: A Roadmap for Radicals (AK Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Sobchack, Vivian. “The Scene of the Screen: Envisioning Cinematic and Electronic Presence,” in Pfeiffer, Karl Ludwig and Gumbrecht, Hans Ulrich (eds.), Materialities of Communication (Stanford University Press, 1994), 83106.Google Scholar
Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. Death of a Discipline (Columbia University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Squires, Claire. Marketing Literature: The Making of Contemporary Writing in Britain (Palgrave, 2009).Google Scholar
Stam, Robert. “Introduction,” in Stam, Robert and Raengo, Alessandro (eds.),Literature and Film: A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Film Adaptation (Blackwell, 2005), 152.Google Scholar
Stark, John O. Pynchon’s Fictions: Thomas Pynchon and the Literature of Information (Ohio University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
St. Clair, Justin. “Binocular Disparity and Pynchon’s Panoramic Paradigm,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 6788.Google Scholar
Steffen, Will et al. “The Anthropocene: Conceptual and Historical Perspectives,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, 369 (2011), 842–69.Google ScholarPubMed
Steffen, Will et al. “The Trajectory of the Anthropocene: The Great Acceleration,” The Anthropocene Review, 2.1 (2015), 8198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stimpson, Catherine. “Pre-apocalyptic Atavism: Thomas Pynchon’s Early Fiction,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 3147.Google Scholar
Stolberg, Sheryl Gay, and Lichtblau, Eric. “Justice Department to Re-examine Police Accords,” New York Times, April 4, 2017, A1.Google Scholar
Striphas, Ted. The Late Age of Print: Everyday Book Culture from Consumerism to Control (Columbia University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
“The Survivor Tree.” 9/11 Memorial and Museum, www.911memorial.org/survivor-tree.Google Scholar
Swanstrom, Lisa. “The Peripheral Future,” electronic book review, April 3, 2016, www.electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/peripheral.Google Scholar
Szerszynski, Bronislaw. “The End of the End of Nature: The Anthropocene and the Fate of the Human,” Oxford Literary Review, 34.2 (2012), 165–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tabbi, Joseph. Cognitive Fictions (University of Minnesota Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Tabbi, Joseph. “The Pyndustry in Warwick,” Studies in the Novel, 30.3 (1998), 438–43.Google Scholar
Tesh, Sylvia Noble. Uncertain Hazards: Environmental Activists and Scientific Proof (Cornell University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Thom, René. Structural Stability and Morphogenesis: An Outline of a General Theory of Models (Perseus Books, 1999).Google Scholar
Thomas, Samuel. Pynchon and the Political (Routledge, 2007).Google Scholar
Thompson, John B. Merchants of Culture: The Publishing Business in the Twenty-First Century (Plume, 2012).Google Scholar
Tololyan, Khachig. “War as Background in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Clerc, Charles (ed.), Approaches to Gravity’s Rainbow (Ohio State University Press, 1983), 3167.Google Scholar
Toth, Josh. The Passing of Postmodernism: A Spectroanalysis of the Contemporary (SUNY Press, 2010).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsatsoulis, Christos Iraklis. “Unsupervised Text-Mining Methods for Literature Analysis: A Case Study for Thomas Pynchon’s V.” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 1.2 (2013), 134.Google Scholar
Turner, Frederick Jackson. “The Significance of the Frontier in American History,” in The Frontier in American History (Dover, 2010), 138.Google Scholar
Underwood, Ted. Why Literary Periods Mattered: Historical Contrast and the Prestige of English Studies (Stanford University Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Usai, Paolo Cherchi. The Death of Cinema: History, Cultural Memory, and the Digital Dark Age (British Film Institute, 2001).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Gaag, Nikki. Feminism and Men (Zed Books, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Veggian, Henry. “Thomas Pynchon Against the Day,” boundary 2, 35.1 (2008), 197215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vidal, Gore. “American Plastic: The Matter of Fiction,” The New York Review of Books, July 15, 1974, 3138.Google Scholar
Weisenburger, Steven. A Gravity’s Rainbow Companion: Sources and Contexts for Pynchon’s Novel (University of Georgia Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Weisenburger, Steven. “In the Zone: Sovereignty and Bare Life in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Pynchon Notes, 56–57 (Spring–Fall 2009), 100–13.Google Scholar
Wenzel, Jennifer. “Planet vs. Globe,” English Language Notes, 52.1 (2014), 1930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Daniel R. Postmodern Ecology: Communication, Evolution, and Play (State University of New York Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Williams, Rosalind. The Triumph of Human Empire: Verne, Morris, and Stevenson at the End of the Planet (University of Chicago Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winston Dixon, Wheeler. “The Celluloid Backlash: Film versus Digital Once More,” Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 33.2 (2016), 122–30.Google Scholar
Witzling, David. Everybody’s America: Thomas Pynchon, Race, and the Cultures of Postmodernism (Routledge, 2008).Google Scholar
Wolfe, Cary. What Is Posthumanism? (University of Minnesota Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Woodcock, George. Anarchism (Toronto, 2004).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, Mark. “Phantasmagoric 9/11: Blowback and the Limits of Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Critique, 56 (2015), 503–51.Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, Theodore. Lure of the Arcane: The Literature of Cult and Conspiracy (JHU Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abbas, Niran (ed.). Thomas Pynchon: Reading from the Margins (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Ahmad, Aijaz. In Theory: Classes, Nations, Literatures (Verso, 1992).Google Scholar
Ahmed, Sara. “Open Forum Imaginary Prohibitions: Some Preliminary Remarks on the Founding Gestures of the ‘New Materialism,’European Journal of Women’s Studies, 15 (2008), doi.org/10.1177/1350506807084854, 2339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, Mary. The Necessary Blankness: Women in Major American Fiction of the Sixties (University of Illinois Press, 1976).Google Scholar
Allington, Daniel, Brouillette, Sarah, and Golumbia, David. “Neoliberal Tools (and Archives): A Political History of Digital Humanities,” Los Angeles Review of Books, May 1, 2016, https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/neoliberal-tools-archives-political-history-digital-humanities/.Google Scholar
Ameriks, Karl. “Introduction: Interpreting German Idealism,” in Ameriks, Karl (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to German Idealism (Cambridge University Press, 2000), 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Cherchez la Femme: The Coercive Paratexts of Thomas Pynchon’s V.,” in Simonetti, Paolo and Rossi, Umberto (eds.), Dream Tonight of Peacock Tails: Essays on the Fiftieth Anniversary of Thomas Pynchon’s V. (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015), 3151.Google Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Distorted Transmissions: Towards a Material Reading of Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49,” Orbis Litterarum, 68.2 (2013), 110–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Judging by the Cover,” Critique, 53.3 (2012), 251–78.Google Scholar
Andersen, Tore Rye. “Mapping the World: Thomas Pynchon’s Global Novels,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.1 (2016), http://doi.org/10.16995/orbit.178.Google Scholar
Anderson, Paul Thomas (dir.). Inherent Vice, Warner Bros., 2014.Google Scholar
John, Asafu-Adjaye et al. “An Ecomodernist Manifesto,” Ecomodernism.org, April 2015, https://ecomodernism.org.Google Scholar
Baker, Jeffry S.A Democratic Pynchon: Counterculture, Counterforce, and Participatory Democracy,” Pynchon Notes, 32–33 (1993), 107–12.Google Scholar
Ballard, J. G., and Cott, Jonathan. “The Strange Visions of J. G. Ballard,” Rolling Stone, November 19, 1987, www.rollingstone.com.Google Scholar
Barad, Karen. Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning (Duke University Press, 2007).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barad, Karen. “Posthumanist Performativity: Toward an Understanding of How Matter Comes to Matter,” Signs, 28 (2003), doi.org/10.1086/signs.2003.28.issue-3, 801–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barad, Karen, Dolphijn, Rick, and van der Tuin, Iris. “Interview with Karen Barad,” in New Materialism: Interviews and Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012), 4870.Google Scholar
Baroni, Raphaël. “Tellability,” in Hühn, Peter et al. (eds.), Handbook of Narratology (De Gruyter, 2014), 836–45.Google Scholar
Bazin, André. “The Ontology of the Photographic Image,” trans. by Hugh Gray, Film Quarterly, 13.4 (Summer 1960), 49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belsey, Catherine. Critical Practice (Routledge, 2002).Google Scholar
Benea, Diana. The Political Imagination of Thomas Pynchon’s Later Novels (University of Bucharest Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. “On Some Motifs in Baudelaire,” in Selected Writings, Volume IV, 1938–40 (Belknap Press, 2006), 313–55.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” in Illuminations, trans. by Harry Zohn (Schocken Books, 1968), 253–64.Google Scholar
Bennett, Jane. “A Vitalist Stopover on the Way to a New Materialism,” in Coole, Diana H. and Frost, Samantha (eds.), New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics (Duke University Press, 2010), 4769.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benton, Graham. Unruly Narratives: The Anarchist Dimension in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon (LAP Lambert Academic Publishing, 2012).Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “Coda: How to Read Pynchon,” in Dalsgaard, Inger, Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 168–77.Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “Gravity’s Rainbow: Text as Film – Film as Text,” in Pynchon’s Poetics: Interfacing Theory and Text (University of Illinois Press, 1993), 151–90.Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “How to Read Pynchon,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 168–77.Google Scholar
Berressem, Hanjo. “Life on the Beach: The Natural Elements in Thomas Pynchon’s California Trilogy,” in McClintock, Scott and Miller, John (eds.), Pynchon’s California (University of Iowa Press, 2014), 3564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertens, Hans. The Idea of the Postmodern: A History (Routledge, 1995).Google Scholar
Bérubé, Michael. Marginal Forces/Cultural Centers: Tolson, Pynchon, and the Politics of the Canon (Cornell University Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Best, Stephen, and Marcus, Sharon. “Surface Reading: An Introduction,” Representations, 108 (2009), doi.org/10.1525/rep.2009.108.1.1, 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biber, Douglas et al. Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English (Pearson, 1999).Google Scholar
Birke, Dorothee, and Christ, Birte. “Paratext and Digitized Narrative: Mapping the Field,” Narrative, 21.1 (2013), 6587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birkerts, Sven. Changing the Subject: Art and Attention in the Internet Age (Graywolf Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Bogost, Ian. Alien Phenomenology, or What It’s Like to Be a Thing (University of Minnesota Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bookchin, Murray. Our Synthetic Environment, rev. ed. (Harper, 1974).Google Scholar
Bosman, Julie. “After Long Resistance, Pynchon Allows Novels to Be Sold as E-Books,” New York Times, June 12, 2012, https://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/12/after-long-resistance-pynchon-allows-novels-to-be-sold-as-e-books/.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. The Field of Cultural Production (Polity Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Bourriaud, Nicolas. “Altermodern,” in Rudrum, David and Stavris, Nicholas (eds.), Supplanting the Postmodern: An Anthology of Writings on the Arts and Culture of the Early 21st Century (Bloomsbury, 2015), 255–69.Google Scholar
Braidotti, Rosi. Nomadic Subjects: Embodiment and Sexual Difference in Contemporary Feminist Theory (Columbia University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Bray, , Roger, J., and Curtis, J. T.. “An Ordination of the Upland Forest Communities of Southern Wisconsin,” Ecological Monographs, 27.4 (October 1957), 325–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bronfenbrenner, Urie. The Ecology of Human Development: Experiments by Nature and Design (Harvard University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Bryant, John. The Fluid Text: A Theory of Revision and Editing for Book and Screen (University of Michigan Press, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buell, Lawrence. The Environmental Imagination: Thoreau, Nature Writing, and the Formation of American Culture (Harvard University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Bulson, Eric. “Ulysses by the Numbers,” Representations, 127.1 (Summer 2014), 132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bunch, Will. October 1, 2011: The Battle of the Brooklyn Bridge. Kindle.Google Scholar
Burnett, John. “Big Money as Private Immigrant Jails Boom,” National Public Radio, November 21, 2017, www.npr.org/2017/11/21/565318778/big-money-as-private-immigrant-jails-boom.Google Scholar
Burrows, J. F. Computation into Criticism: A Study of Jane Austen’s Novels and An Experiment in Method (Clarendon Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Butler, Judith. Giving an Account of Oneself (Fordham University Press, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
“Cadillac Hearse Art Print,” CruiserArt, no date, www.cruiserart.com/1959_hawaiian-surf-surfer-surfing-art.htm.Google Scholar
Callens, Johan. “Tubed Out and Movie Shot in Pynchon’s Vineland,” Pynchon Notes, 28–29 (1991), 115–41.Google Scholar
Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring (Houghton Mifflin, 1962).Google Scholar
Carswell, Sean. Occupy Pynchon: Politics after Gravity’s Rainbow (University of Georgia Press, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cato, Molly Scott. The Bioregional Economy: Land, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness (Routledge, 2013).Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. “Postcolonial Studies and the Challenge of Climate Change,” New Literary History, 43.2 (2012), 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Alenda. “Environmental Remediation,” electronic book review, July 6, 2015, www.electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/remediation.Google Scholar
Chapman, Wes. “Male Pro-feminism and the Masculinist Gigantism of Gravity’s Rainbow,” Postmodern Culture, 6.3 (1996), n.p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chetwynd, Ali. “Inherent Obligation: The Distinctive Difficulties in and of Recent Pynchon,” English Studies, 95.8 (2014), 923–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chetwynd, Ali. Review of Inger H. Dalsgaard, Luc Herman, and Brian McHale (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon, College Literature, 39.4 (Fall 2012), 142–45.Google Scholar
Chetwynd, Ali, Freer, Joanna, and Maragos, Georgios (eds.). Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender (University of Georgia Press, 2018).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cichosz, Maria. “Postmodern Allegory and 1960s Melancholy in Pynchon’s Inherent Vice,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 58.5 (2017), 521–37.Google Scholar
City of New York Parks and Recreation. “Street Trees for New York City,” http://www.nycgovparks.org/sub_your_park/trees_greenstreets/images/street_trees_for_nyc.pdf.Google Scholar
Clerc, Charles. “Film in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Approaches to Teaching Gravity’s Rainbow (Ohio State University Press, 1983), 103–50.Google Scholar
Clover, Joshua. “Autumn of the System: Poetry and Financial Capital,” Journal of Narrative Theory, 41.1 (2011), 3452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coffman, Christopher K. “Bogomilism, Orphism, Shamanism: The Spiritual and Spatial Grounds of Pynchon’s Ecological Ethic,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 91114.Google Scholar
Cohen, Jeffrey J., and Stephanie, LeMenager. “Introduction,” PMLA, 131.2 (2016), 340–46.Google Scholar
Connolly, William E. “The ‘New Materialism’ and the Fragility of Things,” Millennium, 41 (2013), 399412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coole, Diana H., and Frost, Samantha (eds.) New Materialisms: Ontology, Agency, and Politics (Duke University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Cooper, Peter L. Signs and Symptoms: Thomas Pynchon and the Contemporary World (University of California Press, 1983).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cornell, Andrew. Unruly Equality: US Anarchism in the Twentieth Century (University of California Press, 2016).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowart, David. “‘Down on the Barroom Floor of History’: Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge,” Postmodern Culture, 24 (2013), n.p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowart, David. “Pynchon, Genealogy, History: Against the Day,” Modern Philology, 109.3 (2012), 385407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowart, David. “Pynchon and the Sixties,” Critique, 41.1 (Fall 1999), 312.Google Scholar
Cowart, David. Thomas Pynchon: The Art of Allusion (Southern Illinois University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Cowart, David. Thomas Pynchon and the Dark Passages of History (University of Georgia Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Cubitt, Sean. Finite Media: Environmental Implications of Digital Technologies (Duke University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Currie, Mark. About Time: Narrative, Fiction and the Philosophy of Time (Edinburgh University Press, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalsgaard, Inger H. “Gravity’s Rainbow: ‘A Historical Novel of a Whole New Sort,’” Pynchon Notes, 50–51 (Spring–Fall 2002), 3550.Google Scholar
Dalsgaard, Inger H.Readers and Trespassers: Time Travel, Orthogonal Time, and Alternative Figurations of Time in Against the Day,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 115–38.Google Scholar
Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian, “Introduction,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 19.Google Scholar
Darlington, Joseph. “Capitalist Mysticism and the Historicizing of 9/11 in Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 57.3 (2016), 242–53.Google Scholar
Davidson, Cathy N., and Goldberg, David Theo. “Engaging the Humanities,” Profession (2004), 4262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Noela. “New Materialism and Feminism’s Anti-biologism: A Response to Sara Ahmed,” European Journal of Women’s Studies, 16 (2009), doi.org/10.1177/1350506808098535, 6780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Bourcier, Simon. Pynchon and Relativity: Narrative Time in Thomas Pynchon’s Later Novels (Continuum, 2012).Google Scholar
De Bourcier, Simon. “Reading McHale Reading Pynchon, or, Is Pynchon Still a Postmodernist?,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 2.2 (2014), doi.org/10.7766/orbit.v2.2.68.Google Scholar
DeLanda, Manuel. A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History (Zone Books, 1997).Google Scholar
DeLanda, Manuel, Dolphijn, Rick, and Tuin, Iris van der. “Interview with Manuel DeLanda,” in New Materialism: Interviews & Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012), 3847.Google Scholar
Deleuze, Gilles, and Guattari, Félix. Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (Continuum, 2004).Google Scholar
Deleuze, Gilles, and Guattari, Félix. What Is Philosophy?, trans. by Hugh Tomlinson and Graham Burchell (Columbia University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Dolphijn, Rick, and van der Tuin, Iris, New Materialism: Interviews & Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dornberger, Walter. V2, trans. by James Cleugh and Geoffrey Halliday (Hurst and Blackett, 1954).Google Scholar
Dubos, René. Man Adapting (Yale University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Duyfhuizen, Bernard. “‘A Suspension Forever at the Hinge of Doubt’: The Reader-trap of Bianca in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Postmodern Culture, 1.2 (September 1991), n.p.Google Scholar
Duyfhuizen, Bernard. “From Potsdam to Putzi’s: Can Slothrop Get There in Time? And, in Time for What?Pynchon Notes, 51–52 (September 2002), 5175.Google Scholar
Edelman, Lee. No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive (Duke University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Elias, Amy J. “History,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 123–35.Google Scholar
Elias, Amy J.Plots, Pilgrimage, and the Politics of Genre in Against the Day,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 2946.Google Scholar
Esche, Charles, Papastergiadis, Nikos, and Ranciè, Jacquesre. “Assemblies in Art and Politics: An Interview with Jacques Rancière,” Theory, Culture & Society, 31.7/8 (2014), 2741.Google Scholar
Eve, Martin Paul. Pynchon and Philosophy: Wittgenstein, Foucault and Adorno (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eve, Martin Paul. “Visualizing Gravity’s Rainbow,” Martin Paul Eve, June 7, 2015, www.martineve.com/2015/06/07/visualizing-gravitys-rainbow/.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagan, Madeleine. Ethics and Politics after Poststructuralism: Levinas, Derrida, and Nancy (Edinburgh University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Fan, Christopher T. “Melancholy Transcendence: Ted Chiang and Asian American Postracial Form,” Post45, November 5, 2014, post45.research.yale.edu/2014/11/melancholy-transcendence-ted-chiang-and-asian-american-postracial-form.Google Scholar
Farrell, John. Paranoia and Modernity: Cervantes to Rousseau (Cornell University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Felski, Rita. The Limits of Critique (University of Chicago Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Felski, Rita. “Suspicious Minds,” Poetics Today, 32.2 (2011), 215–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fish, Stanley. “Mind Your P’s and B’s: The Digital Humanities and Interpretation,” New York Times, January 23, 2012, https://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/23/mind-your-ps-and-bs-the-digital-humanities-and-interpretation/.Google Scholar
Fish, Stanley. “What Is Stylistics, and Why Are They Saying Such Terrible Things about It?,” in Is There a Text in This Class?: The Authority of Interpretive Communities (Harvard University Press, 1980), 6896.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, Kathleen. The Anxiety of Obsolescence: The American Novel in the Age of Television (Vanderbilt University Press, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fjellestad, Danuta, and Watson, David. “The Futures of American Literature,” Studia Neophilologica, 87 (2015), 17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flood, Alison. “Thousands of Authors Opt Out of Google Book Settlement,” The Guardian, February 23, 2010, www.theguardian.com/books/2010/feb/23/authors-opt-out-google-book-settlement.Google Scholar
Foerster, Heinz von. Understanding Understanding: Essays on Cybernetics and Cognition (Springer, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franco, Marie. “Queer Postmodern Practices: Sex and Narrative in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Twentieth-Century Literature, 63.2 (2017), 141–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franco, Marie. “Queer Sex, Queer Text: S/M in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Chetwynd, Ali, Freer, Joanna, and Maragos, Georgios (eds.), Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender (University of Georgia Press, 2018), 88108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frangipane, Nicholas. “Freeways and Fog: The Shift in Attitude between Postmodernism and Post-postmodernism from The Crying of Lot 49 to Inherent Vice,” Critique, 57.5 (2016), 521–32.Google Scholar
Freer, Joanna. Thomas Pynchon and American Counterculture (Cambridge University Press, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freer, Joanna. “Is Pynchon a Feminist?,” Berfrois, June 9, 2011, www.berfrois.com/2011/06/thomas-pynchon-relative-feminist-by-joanna-freer/.Google Scholar
Freer, Joanna. “Thomas Pynchon and the Black Panther Party: Revolutionary Suicide in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Journal of American Studies, 47.1 (February 2013), 171–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedberg, Anne. “The End of Cinema: Multimedia and Technological Change,” in Gledhill, Christine and Williams, Linda (eds.), Reinventing Film Studies (Arnold, 2000), 438–52.Google Scholar
Gautreau, Justin. “‘Clearer than Real’: A History of Mediated Realities in Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Genre, 47.2 (2014), 141–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gazi, Jeesha. “Mapping the Metaphysics of the Multiverse in Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Critique, 57.1 (2016), 8093.Google Scholar
Gazzaley, Adam, and Rosen, Larry D.. The Distracted Mind: Ancient Brains in a High-Tech World (MIT Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Geier, Thom. “Thomas Pynchon Speaks! Author Lends His Voice to ‘Inherent Vice’ Trailer,” Entertainment Weekly, August 11, 2009, https://ew.com/article/2009/08/11/thomas-pynchon-speaks-inherent-vice-trailer/.Google Scholar
Genette, Gérard. Paratexts: Thresholds of Interpretation (Cambridge University Press, 1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giesler, Loren J. “Purple Seed Stain and Cercospora Blight,” Cropwatch, University of Nebraska–Lincoln Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, https://cropwatch.unl.edu/plantdisease/soybean/purple-seed-stain.Google Scholar
Gitlin, Todd. Occupy Nation: The Roots, the Spirit, and the Promise of Occupy Wall Street (It Books, 2012).Google Scholar
Gitlin, Todd. The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage (Bantam, 1987).Google Scholar
Goldberg, David Theo. The Threat of Race: Reflections on Racial Neoliberalism (Blackwell, 2009).Google Scholar
Gourley, James. Terrorism and Temporality in the Works of Thomas Pynchon and Don DeLillo (Bloomsbury, 2013).Google Scholar
Graeber, David. “The New Anarchists,” New Left Review, 13 (January/February 2002), 6173.Google Scholar
Grassian, Daniel. Hybrid Fictions: American Literature and Generation X (McFarland, 2003).Google Scholar
Greenberg, Alvin. “The Underground Woman: An Excursion into the V-ness of Thomas Pynchon,” Chelsea, 27 (1969), 5865.Google Scholar
Grosz, Elizabeth. “Thinking the New: Of Futures Yet Unthought,” in Grosz, Elizabeth (ed.), Becomings: Explorations in Time, Memory, and Futures (Cornell University Press, 1999), 1528.Google Scholar
Gussow, Mel. “Pynchon’s Letters Nudge His Mask,” New York Times, March 4, 1998, www.nytimes.com/1998/03/04/books/pynchon-s-letters-nudge-his-mask.html.Google Scholar
Hadjioannou, Markos. From Light to Byte: Toward an Ethics of Digital Cinema (University of Minnesota Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haenni, Sabine. The Immigrant Scene: Ethnic Amusements in New York, 1880–1920 (University of Minnesota Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Haeselin, David. “Welcome to the Indexed World: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge and The Things Search Engines Will Not Find,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 58.4 (2017), 313–24.Google Scholar
Haferkamp, Leyla. “‘Particle or Wave’: The ‘Function’ of the Prairie in Against the Day,” in Pöhlmann, Sascha (ed.), Against the Grain: Reading Pynchon’s Counternarratives (Rodopi, 2010), 307–22.Google Scholar
Hajdu, David. Positively 4th Street: The Lives and Times of Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez Fariña, and Richard Fariña (Picador, 2001).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna. The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness (Prickly Paradigm, 2003).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna. “Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective,” Feminist Studies, 14 (1988), doi.org/10.2307/3178066, 575–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haraway, Donna. When Species Meet (University of Minnesota Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Hardack, Richard. “Consciousness without Borders: Narratology in Against the Day and the Work of Thomas Pynchon,” Criticism, 52.1 (2010), 91128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardt, Michael, and Negri, Antonio. Empire (Harvard University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Hardt, Michael and Negri, Antonio. Multitude (Penguin, 2004).Google Scholar
Harris, Michael. “Pynchon’s Postcoloniality,” in Abbas, Niran (ed.), Thomas Pynchon: Reading from the Margins (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2003), 197214.Google Scholar
Hasan, Medhi. “Barack Obama: The Deporter-in-Chief,” Al Jazeera, January 14, 2017, www.aljazeera.com.Google Scholar
Hassan, Ihab. “Toward a Concept of Postmodernism,” in The Postmodern Turn: Essays in Postmodern Theory and Culture (Ohio State University Press, 1987), 8496.Google Scholar
Hawthorne, Mark D. “A ‘Hermaphrodite Sort of Deity’: Sexuality, Gender, and Gender Blending in Thomas Pynchon’s V.” Studies in the Novel, 29.1 (1997), 7493.Google Scholar
Hayles, N. Katherine. How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis (University of Chicago Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayles, N. Katherine. “Hyper and Deep Attention: The Generational Divide in Cognitive Modes,” Profession (2007), 188–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heilemann, John. “2012 = 1968?,” New York Magazine, November 27, 2011, nymag.com/news/politics/occupy-wall-street-2011–12/.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc. “Introduction: Approach and Avoid,” Pynchon Notes, 42–43 (1998), 911.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc. “Storyworld and Historiographic Metafiction: Belgium in Against the Day,” in Chorier-Fryd, Bénédicte and Chamerois, Gilles (eds.), Thomas Pynchon (Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée, 2013), 173–91.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc, and Vervaeck, Bart. “Narrative Interest as Cultural Negotiation,” Narrative, 17 (2009), 111–29.Google Scholar
Herman, Luc, and Vervaeck, Bart. “Negotiating the Paranoia Narrative: The Critical Reception of Bleeding Edge (2013) by Thomas Pynchon,” Anglia, 134.1 (2016), 88112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herman, Luc, Hogenraad, Robert, and Wim Van, Mierlo. “Pynchon, Postmodernism, and Quantification: An Empirical Content Analysis of Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow,” Language and Literature, 12.1 (2003), 2741.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herman, Luc, and Weisenburger, Steven. Gravity’s Rainbow, Domination, and Freedom (University of Georgia Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hinds, Elizabeth Jane Wall. The Multiple Worlds of Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon: Eighteenth-Century Contexts, Postmodern Observations (Camden House, 2005).Google Scholar
Hite, Molly. Ideas of Order in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon (Ohio State University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Hite, Molly. “When Pynchon Was a Boys’ Club: V. and Midcentury Mystifications of Gender,” in Chetwynd, Ali, Freer, Joanna, and Maragos, Georgios (eds.), Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender (Georgia University Press, 2018), 316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
hooks, bell. Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Huehls, Mitchum. “The Great Flattening,” Contemporary Literature, 54.4 (2013), 861–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, Kathryn. “Attenuated Realities: Pynchon’s Trajectory from V. to Inherent Vice,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 2 (2013), doi.org/10.7766/orbit.v2.1.50.Google Scholar
Hume, Kathryn. “Pynchon’s Alternate Realities from V. to Inherent Vice,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 2.1 (2013), https://orbit.openlibhums.org/article/doi/10.7766/orbit.v2.1.50/.Google Scholar
Hutcheon, Linda. The Politics of Postmodernism, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ickstadt, Heinz. “History, Utopia, and Transcendence in the Space-Time of Against the Day,” Pynchon Notes, 54–55 (2008), doi.org/10.16995/pn.37, 216–44.Google Scholar
Jackson, Richard. “The Epistemological Crisis of Counter-terrorism,” Critical Studies on Terrorism, 8.1 (2015), 3354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarvis, Michael. “Pynchon’s Deep Web,” Los Angeles Review of Books, September 12, 2013, https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/pynchons-deep-web.Google Scholar
Jarvis, Michael. “Very Nice Indeed: Cyprian Latewood’s Masochistic Sublime, and the Religious Pluralism of Against the Day,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 1 (2013), doi.org/10.7766/orbit.v1.2.45.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Henry. “Transmedia Storytelling 101,” Confessions of an ACA-Fan, March 21, 2007, henryjenkins.org/2007/03/transmedia_storytelling_101.html.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Henry, Ford, Sam, and Green, Joshua. Spreadable Media: Creating Meaning and Value in a Networked Culture (New York University Pres, 2013).Google Scholar
Jingo, Neddie. “Tibetan Ampersands,” Chumps of Choice, December 7, 2006, chumpsofchoice.blogspot.dk/2006/12/tibetan-ampersands.html.Google Scholar
Jockers, Matthew L. Text Analysis with R for Students of Literature (Springer International, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnston, John. “Mediality in Vineland and Neuromancer,” in Tabbi, Joseph and Wutz, Michael (eds.), Reading Matters: Narrative in the New Media Ecology (Cornell University Press, 1997), 173–92.Google Scholar
Jones, Steven E. Against Technology: From the Luddites to Neo-Luddism (Routledge, 2006).Google Scholar
Käkelä-Puumala, Tiina. “‘There Is Money Everywhere’: Representation, Authority, and the Money Form in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Critique, 43 (2013), 147–60.Google Scholar
Kaufman, Marjorie. “Brünnhilde and the Chemists: Women in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 197227.Google Scholar
Kellogg, Carolyn. “Thomas Pynchon’s Playlist,” Los Angeles Times, August 10, 2009, https://latimesblogs.latimes.com/jacketcopy/2009/08/pynchons-playlist.html.Google Scholar
Kim, Sue J. Critiquing Postmodernism in Contemporary Discourses of Race (Palgrave, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Sue J.Racial Neoliberalism and Whiteness in Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Platt, Len and Upstone, Sara (eds.), Postmodern Literature and Race (Cambridge University Press, 2015), 264–78.Google Scholar
Kirby, Alan. Digimodernism: How New Technologies Dismantle the Postmodern and Reconfigure Our Culture (Bloomsbury, 2009).Google Scholar
Kirby, Alan. “Successor States to an Empire in Free Fall,” Times Higher Education, May 27, 2010, www.timeshighereducation.com/features/successor-states-to-an-empire-in-free-fall/411731.article.Google Scholar
Kirkpatrick, Jennet. “Introduction: Selling Out? Solidarity and Choice in the American Feminist Movement,” Perspectives on Politics, 8.1 (2010), 241–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirschenbaum, Matthew G. “What Is Digital Humanities, and What’s It Doing in English Departments?ADE Bulletin, 150 (2010), 17.Google Scholar
Kopp, Manfred. Triangulating Thomas Pynchon’s Eighteenth-Century World: Theory, Structure, and Paranoia in Mason & Dixon (Die Blaue Eule, 2004).Google Scholar
Kurutz, Steven. “Yup, It’s Him: A Pynchon Mystery Solved,” Wall Street Journal, August 11, 2009, https://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2009/08/11/pynchon-revealed/.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno. “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam? From Matters of Fact to Matters of Concern,” Critical Inquiry, 30 (2004), 225–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leise, Christopher. “Introduction: ‘Exceeding the Usual Three Dimensions’: Collective Visions of the Unsuspected,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 111.Google Scholar
Leopold, Aldo. A Sand County Almanac (Oxford University Press, 1949).Google Scholar
Letzler, David. The Cruft of Fiction: Mega-novels and the Science of Paying Attention (University of Nebraska Press, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Letzler, David. “How to Read Bad Books by Great Authors: A Review of Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge,” The Writing Disorder, 2014, www.thewritingdisorder.com/nonfiction-david-letzler.html.Google Scholar
Letzler, David. “A Phenomenology of the Present: Toward a Digital Understanding of Gravity’s Rainbow,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.2 (August 2016), 132.Google Scholar
Leverenz, David. “On Trying to Read Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 229–50.Google Scholar
Levine, George. “Risking the Moment: Anarchy and Possibility in Pynchon’s Fiction,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 113–36.Google Scholar
Lifshey, Adam. Specters of Conquest: Indigenous Absence in Transatlantic Literatures (Fordham University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Liner, James. “Utopia and Debt in Postmodernity; or, Time Management in Inherent Vice,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.1 (2016), https://orbit.openlibhums.org/article/doi/10.16995/orbit.174/.Google Scholar
Ling, Huping, and Austin, Allan. Asian American History and Culture: An Encyclopedia (Routledge, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Link, E. C.Luddism in ‘Under the Rose,’Pynchon Notes, 30–31 (1992), 157–64.Google Scholar
Locke, Richard. “One of the Longest, Most Difficult, Most Ambitious Novels in Years,” New York Times, March 11, 1973, archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/05/18/reviews/pynchon-rainbow.html?_r=2.Google Scholar
Lord, Geoffrey. Postmodernism and Notions of National Difference: A Comparison of Postmodern Fiction in Britain and America (Rodopi, 1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lorenz, Edward N. The Essence of Chaos (University of Washington Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Lorey, Isabell. “The 2011 Occupy Movements: Rancière and the Crisis of Democracy,” Theory, Culture & Society, 31.7/8 (2014), 4365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marcus, Ben. “Why Experimental Fiction Threatens to Destroy Publishing, Jonathan Franzen, and Life as We Know It: A Correction,” Harper’s Magazine, October 2005, 3952.Google Scholar
Marshall, Peter. Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism (PM Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Martin, Tim. Review of Against the Day, by Thomas Pynchon, The Independent, November 26, 2006.Google Scholar
Mathijs, Ernest. “Reel to Real: Film History in Pynchon’s Vineland,” Literature/Film Quarterly, 29.1 (2001), 6270.Google Scholar
May, Todd. The Political Philosophy of Poststructuralist Anarchism (Penn State University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
McCann, Sean, and Szalay, Michael. “Do You Believe in Magic?: Literary Thinking after the New Left,” The Yale Journal of Criticism, 18. 2 (2005), 435–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClintock, Anne. Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest (Routledge, 1995).Google Scholar
McClure, David. “Distributions of Words across Narrative Time in 27,266 Novels,” DM, July 8, 2017, dclure.org/labs/distributions-of-words-27k-novels/.Google Scholar
McClure, David. “Literary MRI’s (or, Tuning Textplot),” DM, May 20, 2015, dclure.org/logs/tuning-textplot/.Google Scholar
McClure, David. “(Mental) Maps of Texts,” DM, September 24, 2014, dclure.org/essays/mental-maps-of-texts/.Google Scholar
McClure, John. “Do They Believe in Magic? Politics and Postmodern Literature,” boundary 2, 36.2 (2009), 125–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCracken, Ellen. “Expanding Genette’s Epitext/Peritext Model for Transitional Electronic Literature: Centrifugal and Centripetal Vectors on Kindles and iPads,” Narrative, 21.1 (2013), 105–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGurl, Mark. “Critical Response II: ‘Neither Indeed Could I Forbear Smiling at Myself,’” Critical Inquiry, 39.3 (2013), 632–38.Google Scholar
McGurl, Mark. “The Posthuman Comedy,” Critical Inquiry, 38.3 (2012), 533–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Change of Dominant from Modernist to Postmodernist Writing,” in Fokkema, Douwe and Bertens, Hans (eds.), Approaching Postmodernism: Papers Presented at a Workshop on Postmodernism, Utrecht Publications in General and Comparative Literature, 21 (John Benjamins, 1986), 5379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Genre as History: Genre-Poaching in Against the Day,” Genre, 42.3–4 (2009), doi.org/10.1215/00166928–42-3–4-5, 520.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Genre as History: Pynchon’s Genre-Poaching,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 1528.Google Scholar
McHale, Brian. Postmodernist Fiction (Routledge, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McHale, Brian. “Pynchon’s Postmodernism,” in Dalsgaard, Inger H., Herman, Luc, and McHale, Brian (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 97111.Google Scholar
McHale, Brian. “What Was Postmodernism?” electronic book review, December 20, 2007, www.electronicbookreview.com/thread/fictionspresent/tense.Google Scholar
McHugh, Patrick. “Cultural Politics, Postmodernism, and White Guys: Affect in Gravity’s Rainbow,” College Literature, 28.2 (Spring 2001), 128.Google Scholar
McLaughlin, Robert L. “Franz Pökler’s Anti-story: Narrative and Self in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Pynchon Notes, 40–41 (Spring–Fall 1997), 159–75.Google Scholar
Meeks, Elijah, and Weingart, Scott (eds.). Special issue, Journal of Digital Humanities, 2.1 (Winter 2012).Google Scholar
Meillassoux, Quentin. After Finitude: An Essay on the Necessity of Contingency, trans. by Ray Brassier (Continuum, 2009).Google Scholar
Meillassoux, Quentin, Dolphijn, Rick, and Tuin, Iris van der. “Interview with Quentin Meillasoux,” in New Materialism: Interviews & Cartographies (Open Humanities Press, 2012), 7181.Google Scholar
Melley, Timothy. Empire of Conspiracy: The Culture of Paranoia in Postwar America (Cornell University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Mendoza, Breny. “Coloniality of Gender and Power: From Postcoloniality to Decoloniality,” in Disch, Lisa and Hawkesworth, Mary (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Feminist Theory (Oxford University Press, 2016), 100–21.Google Scholar
Miller, James A. Democracy Is in the Streets: From Port Huron to the Siege of Chicago (Simon and Schuster, 1987).Google Scholar
Milliot, Jim. “As E-Book Sales Decline, Digital Fatigue Grows,” Publishers Weekly, June 17, 2016, www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/digital/retailing/article/70696-as-e-book-sales-decline-digital-fatigue-grows.html.Google Scholar
Mohanty, Chandra. “Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses,” boundary 2, 12.3–13.1 (Spring–Autumn 1984), 333–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molloy, Seán. “Escaping the Politics of Irredeemable Earth: Anarchy and Transcendence in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon,” Theory & Event, 13.3 (2010), n.p.Google Scholar
Moore, Thomas. “Gravity’s Rainbow as the Incredible Moving Film,” in The Style of Connectedness: Gravity’s Rainbow and Thomas Pynchon (University of Missouri Press, 1987), 3062.Google Scholar
Moraru, Christian. Cosmodernism: American Narrative, Late Globalization, and the New Cultural Imaginary (University of Michigan Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Morton, Timothy. Ecology without Nature: Rethinking Environmental Aesthetics (Harvard University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Moya, Paula, and Markus, Hazel, (eds.). Doing Race: 21 Essays for the 21st Century (Norton, 2010).Google Scholar
Murray, Padmini Ray, and Squires, Claire. “The Digital Publishing Communications Circuit,” Book 2.0, 3.1 (2013), 323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muth, Katie. “The Grammars of the System: Thomas Pynchon at Boeing,” in Freer, Joanna and Haynes, Doug (eds.), “Pynchonomics,” special issue, Textual Practice (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Naveh, Danny, and Bird-David, Nurit. “Animism, Conservation, and Immediacy,” in Harvey, Graham (ed.), The Handbook of Contemporary Animism (Routledge, 2013), 2737.Google Scholar
Neufeld, Michael J. The Rocket and the Reich: Peenemünde and the Coming of the Ballistic Missile Era (Harvard University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Newman, Saul. Unstable Universalities: Poststructuralism and Radical Politics (Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. “New York City Street Tree Map,” https://tree-map.nycgovparks.org/#speciesId-71298.Google Scholar
North, Paul. The Problem of Distraction (Stanford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
O’Bryan, Michael. “In Defense of Vineland: Pynchon, Anarchism, and the New Left,” Twentieth-Century Literature, 62.1 (March 2016), 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Donnell, Patrick. Latent Destinies: Cultural Paranoia and Contemporary US Narrative (Duke University Press, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olster, Stacey. The Trash Phenomenon: Contemporary Literature, Popular Culture, and the Making of the American Century (University of Georgia Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Olster, Stacey. “When You’re a (Nin)jette, You’re a (Nin)jette All the Way – or Are You?: Female Filmmaking in Vineland,” in Green, Geoffrey, Greiner, Donald J., and McCaffery, Larry (eds.), The Vineland Papers: Critical Takes on Pynchon’s Novel (Dalkey Archive, 1994), 119–34.Google Scholar
Omi, Michael, and Winant, Howard. Racial Formation in the United States: From the 1960s to the 1990s, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 1994).Google Scholar
Palmeri, Frank. “Other than Postmodern? – Foucault, Pynchon, Hybridity, Ethics,” Postmodern Culture, 12.1 (2001), http://pmc.iath.virginia.edu/issue.901/12.1palmeri.html.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parikka, Jussi. A Geology of Media (University of Minnesota Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pedregosa, Fabian et al. “Scikit-learn: Machine Learning in Python,” JMLR, 12 (2011), 2825–30.Google Scholar
Perec, Georges. The Machine, trans. by Ulrich Schönherr, Review of Contemporary Fiction, 29.1 (Spring 2009), 3393.Google Scholar
Perec, Georges, and Mortley, Kaye. “The Doing of Fiction,” Review of Contemporary Fiction, 29.1 (Spring 2009), 94–101.Google Scholar
Pettman, Dominic. Infinite Distraction: Paying Attention to Social Media (Polity, 2016).Google Scholar
Piekarski, Krzysztof et al. “Mapping, the Unmappable, and Pynchon’s Antitragic Vision,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 4766.Google Scholar
Plater, William M. The Grim Phoenix: Reconstructing Thomas Pynchon (Indiana University Press, 1978).Google Scholar
Pöhlmann, Sascha. “The Complex Text,” in Pöhlmann, Sascha (ed.), Against the Grain: Reading Pynchon’s Counternarratives (Rodopi, 2010), 934.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pöhlmann, Sascha. “‘I Just Look at Books’: Reading the Monetary Metareality of Bleeding Edge,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.1 (2016), https://orbit.openlibhums.org/article/doi/10.16995/orbit.189/.Google Scholar
Pratt, Geraldine, and Rosner, Victoria. The Global and the Intimate: Feminism in Our Time (Columbia University Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Punday, Daniel. Writing at the Limit: The Novel in the New Media Ecology (University of Nebraska Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. “Introduction,” in Orwell, George, Nineteen Eighty-Four (Penguin, 2003), vxxv.Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. “Introduction,” in Dodge, Jim, Stone Junction (Canongate, 1997).Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. “Is It O.K. to Be a Luddite?” New York Times, October 28, 1984, www.nytimes.com/books/97/05/18/reviews/pynchon-luddite.html.Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. Letter to Candida Donadio, April 1964.Google Scholar
Pynchon, Thomas. Letter to Cork Smith, February 23, 1962 (held by the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, the University of Texas at Austin).Google Scholar
Ramsay, Stephen. Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism (University of Illinois Press, 2011).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsay, Stephen. “Stanley and Me,” Stephen Ramsay, November 8, 2012, http://web.archive.org/web/20170517223144/http://stephenramsay.us/text/2012/11/08/stanley-and-me.Google Scholar
Rancière, Jacques. Disagreement (1995), trans. by Julie Rose (University of Minnesota Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Rockhill, Gabriel. “Translator’s Introduction,” in Rancière, Jacques, The Politics of Aesthetics (Continuum, 2004), 16.Google Scholar
Rodowick, David N. The Virtual Life of Film (Harvard University Press, 2007).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rorty, Richard. Achieving Our Country (Harvard University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Rosenbaum, Jonathan. “One Man’s Meat Is Another Man’s Poisson,” Village Voice, March 29, 1973, www.jonathanrosenbaum.net/1973/03/one-mans-meat-is-another-mans-poisson/.Google Scholar
Ross, Christine. The Past Is the Present; It’s the Future Too: The Temporal Turn in Contemporary Art (Continuum, 2012).Google Scholar
Rowberry, Simon Peter. “Reassessing the Gravity’s Rainbow Pynchon Wiki: A New Research Paradigm?Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 1.1 (2012), 125.Google Scholar
Rudrum, David, and Stavris, Nicholas. “Introduction,” in Rudrum, David and Stavris, Nicholas (eds.), Supplanting the Postmodern: An Anthology of Writings on the Arts and Culture of the Early 21st Century (Bloomsbury, 2015), xixxix.Google Scholar
Ryan, Marie-Laure. “Tellability,” in Herman, David, Jahn, Manfred, and Ryan, Marie-Laure (eds.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Narrative Theory (Routledge, 2005), 589–91.Google Scholar
Saint-Amour, Paul. Tense Future: Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form (Oxford University Press, 2015).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saldívar, Ramón. “Imagining Cultures: The Transnational Imaginary in Postrace America,” Journal of Transnational American Studies, 4 (2012), 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saldívar, Ramón. “The Second Elevation of the Novel: Race, Form, and the Postrace Aesthetic in Contemporary Narrative,” Narrative, 21 (2013), 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sale, Kirkpatrick. Rebels against the Future: The Luddites and Their War on the Industrial Revolution (Addison-Wesley, 1995).Google Scholar
Sale, Kirkpatrick. SDS (Random House, 1973).Google Scholar
Samuels, Lisa, and Jerome, McGann. “Deformance and Interpretation,” New Literary History, 30.1 (Winter 1999), 2556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samuels, Robert. New Media, Cultural Studies, and Critical Theory after Postmodernism: Automodernity from Žižek to Laclau (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaub, Thomas H. “Preface,” in Schaub, Thomas H. (ed.), Approaches to Teaching Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49 and Other Works (The Modern Language Association of America, 2008), ixxiii.Google Scholar
Schaub, Thomas H. Pynchon: The Voice of Ambiguity (University of Illinois Press, 1981).Google Scholar
Schroeder, Ralph, and den Besten, Matthijs L.. “Literary Sleuths Online: e-Research Collaboration on the Pynchon Wiki,” Information, Communication & Society, 11.2 (January 2008), 2545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scranton, Roy. Learning to Die in the Anthropocene: Reflections on the End of a Civilization (City Lights, 2015).Google Scholar
Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity (Duke University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Seligman, Scott D. Tong Wars: The Untold Story of Vice, Money, and Murder in New York’s Chinatown (Penguin, 2016).Google Scholar
Severs, Jeffrey. “‘The abstractions she was instructed to embody’: Women, Capitalism, and Artistic Representation in Against the Day,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 215238.Google Scholar
Severs, Jeffrey. “‘A Terrible Inertia’: Thomas Pynchon’s Cold War History of 9/11 and the War on Terror in Bleeding Edge,” in Pope, Heather E. and Bryan, Victoria M. (eds.), Reflecting 9/11: New Narratives in Literature, Television, Film, and Theatre (Cambridge Scholars Press, 2016), 7796.Google Scholar
Shear, Michael D., and Liptak, Adam. “Taking Up Case, Justices Let U.S. Start Travel Ban,” New York Times, June 27, 2017, A1.Google Scholar
Siebers, Tobin. Cold War Criticism and the Politics of Skepticism (Oxford University Press, 1993).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siegel, Jason. “Meatspace Is Cyberspace: The Pynchonian Posthuman in Bleeding Edge,” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 4.2 (2016), 127, doi.org/10.16995/orbit.187.Google Scholar
Silvester, Jeremy, and Gewald, Jan-Bart. Words Cannot Be Found: German Colonial Rule in Namibia: An Annotated Reprint of the 1918 Blue Book (Brill, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simmon, Scott. “Beyond the Theater of War: Gravity’s Rainbow as Film,” Literature/Film Quarterly, 6 (1978), 347–63.Google Scholar
Simonetti, Paolo. “Historical Fiction after 9/11: Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Modern Language Studies, 41 (2011), 2641.Google Scholar
Siu, Paul. The Chinese Laundrymen: A Study of Social Isolation (New York University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Smith, Shawn. Pynchon and History: Metahistorical Rhetoric and Postmodern Narrative Form in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon (Routledge, 2005).Google Scholar
Smucker, Jonathan. Hegemony How-To: A Roadmap for Radicals (AK Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Sobchack, Vivian. “The Scene of the Screen: Envisioning Cinematic and Electronic Presence,” in Pfeiffer, Karl Ludwig and Gumbrecht, Hans Ulrich (eds.), Materialities of Communication (Stanford University Press, 1994), 83106.Google Scholar
Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. Death of a Discipline (Columbia University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Squires, Claire. Marketing Literature: The Making of Contemporary Writing in Britain (Palgrave, 2009).Google Scholar
Stam, Robert. “Introduction,” in Stam, Robert and Raengo, Alessandro (eds.),Literature and Film: A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Film Adaptation (Blackwell, 2005), 152.Google Scholar
Stark, John O. Pynchon’s Fictions: Thomas Pynchon and the Literature of Information (Ohio University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
St. Clair, Justin. “Binocular Disparity and Pynchon’s Panoramic Paradigm,” in Severs, Jeffrey and Leise, Christopher (eds.), Pynchon’s Against the Day: A Corrupted Pilgrim’s Guide (University of Delaware Press, 2011), 6788.Google Scholar
Steffen, Will et al. “The Anthropocene: Conceptual and Historical Perspectives,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, 369 (2011), 842–69.Google ScholarPubMed
Steffen, Will et al. “The Trajectory of the Anthropocene: The Great Acceleration,” The Anthropocene Review, 2.1 (2015), 8198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stimpson, Catherine. “Pre-apocalyptic Atavism: Thomas Pynchon’s Early Fiction,” in Levine, George and Leverenz, David (eds.), Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown, 1976), 3147.Google Scholar
Stolberg, Sheryl Gay, and Lichtblau, Eric. “Justice Department to Re-examine Police Accords,” New York Times, April 4, 2017, A1.Google Scholar
Striphas, Ted. The Late Age of Print: Everyday Book Culture from Consumerism to Control (Columbia University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
“The Survivor Tree.” 9/11 Memorial and Museum, www.911memorial.org/survivor-tree.Google Scholar
Swanstrom, Lisa. “The Peripheral Future,” electronic book review, April 3, 2016, www.electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/peripheral.Google Scholar
Szerszynski, Bronislaw. “The End of the End of Nature: The Anthropocene and the Fate of the Human,” Oxford Literary Review, 34.2 (2012), 165–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tabbi, Joseph. Cognitive Fictions (University of Minnesota Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Tabbi, Joseph. “The Pyndustry in Warwick,” Studies in the Novel, 30.3 (1998), 438–43.Google Scholar
Tesh, Sylvia Noble. Uncertain Hazards: Environmental Activists and Scientific Proof (Cornell University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Thom, René. Structural Stability and Morphogenesis: An Outline of a General Theory of Models (Perseus Books, 1999).Google Scholar
Thomas, Samuel. Pynchon and the Political (Routledge, 2007).Google Scholar
Thompson, John B. Merchants of Culture: The Publishing Business in the Twenty-First Century (Plume, 2012).Google Scholar
Tololyan, Khachig. “War as Background in Gravity’s Rainbow,” in Clerc, Charles (ed.), Approaches to Gravity’s Rainbow (Ohio State University Press, 1983), 3167.Google Scholar
Toth, Josh. The Passing of Postmodernism: A Spectroanalysis of the Contemporary (SUNY Press, 2010).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsatsoulis, Christos Iraklis. “Unsupervised Text-Mining Methods for Literature Analysis: A Case Study for Thomas Pynchon’s V.” Orbit: A Journal of American Literature, 1.2 (2013), 134.Google Scholar
Turner, Frederick Jackson. “The Significance of the Frontier in American History,” in The Frontier in American History (Dover, 2010), 138.Google Scholar
Underwood, Ted. Why Literary Periods Mattered: Historical Contrast and the Prestige of English Studies (Stanford University Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Usai, Paolo Cherchi. The Death of Cinema: History, Cultural Memory, and the Digital Dark Age (British Film Institute, 2001).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Gaag, Nikki. Feminism and Men (Zed Books, 2014).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Veggian, Henry. “Thomas Pynchon Against the Day,” boundary 2, 35.1 (2008), 197215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vidal, Gore. “American Plastic: The Matter of Fiction,” The New York Review of Books, July 15, 1974, 3138.Google Scholar
Weisenburger, Steven. A Gravity’s Rainbow Companion: Sources and Contexts for Pynchon’s Novel (University of Georgia Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Weisenburger, Steven. “In the Zone: Sovereignty and Bare Life in Gravity’s Rainbow,” Pynchon Notes, 56–57 (Spring–Fall 2009), 100–13.Google Scholar
Wenzel, Jennifer. “Planet vs. Globe,” English Language Notes, 52.1 (2014), 1930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Daniel R. Postmodern Ecology: Communication, Evolution, and Play (State University of New York Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Williams, Rosalind. The Triumph of Human Empire: Verne, Morris, and Stevenson at the End of the Planet (University of Chicago Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winston Dixon, Wheeler. “The Celluloid Backlash: Film versus Digital Once More,” Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 33.2 (2016), 122–30.Google Scholar
Witzling, David. Everybody’s America: Thomas Pynchon, Race, and the Cultures of Postmodernism (Routledge, 2008).Google Scholar
Wolfe, Cary. What Is Posthumanism? (University of Minnesota Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Woodcock, George. Anarchism (Toronto, 2004).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, Mark. “Phantasmagoric 9/11: Blowback and the Limits of Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day,” Critique, 56 (2015), 503–51.Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, Theodore. Lure of the Arcane: The Literature of Cult and Conspiracy (JHU Press, 2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Joanna Freer, University of Exeter
  • Book: The New Pynchon Studies
  • Online publication: 09 May 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108608916.015
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Joanna Freer, University of Exeter
  • Book: The New Pynchon Studies
  • Online publication: 09 May 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108608916.015
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Joanna Freer, University of Exeter
  • Book: The New Pynchon Studies
  • Online publication: 09 May 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108608916.015
Available formats
×