Fact of the Cage

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A01=Karl A. Plank
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Addiction
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boneless Christ
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Christ
Christianity
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Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian
Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian
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David Foster Wallace
David Foster Wallace's Infinite
David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest
David Foster Wallace’s Infinite
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Gately's Abiding
Good Passage
Hal Incandenza
Hal's Father
Hal's Voice
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Infinite Jest
literary theory
Minor Characters
narrative empathy
New Sincerity
philosophy of suffering
postmodern literature
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reader's redemption
reading experience
Recovery
Religion
religious symbolism
Scourers
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Wallace Studies
Wallace's Fiction
Wallace's Infinite Jest
Wallace's Views
Wallace’s Fiction
Wallace’s Infinite Jest
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Worthwhile

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367611347
  • Weight: 403g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Feb 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest raised expectations of what a novel might do. As he understood fiction to aim at what it means to be human, so he hoped his work might relieve the loneliness of human suffering. In that light, The Fact of the Cage shows how Wallace’s masterpiece dramatizes the condition of encagement and how it comes to be met by "Abiding" and through inter-relational acts of speaking and hearing, touching, and facing. Revealing Wallace’s theology of a "boneless Christ," The Fact of the Cage wagers that reading such a novel as Infinite Jest makes available to readers the redemption glimpsed in its pages, that reading fiction has ethical and religious significance—in short, that reading Infinite Jest makes one better. As such, Plank’s work takes steps to defend the ethics of fiction, the vital relation between religion and literature, and why one just might read at all.

Karl A. Plank is the J.W. Cannon Professor of Religious Studies at Davidson College, USA. The author of Paul and the Irony of Affliction and Mother of the Wire Fence: Inside and Outside the Holocaust, he has published studies in journals such as Religion and Literature, Literature and Theology, Anglican Theological Review, and Cistercian Studies.

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