This book focuses upon the literary and autobiographical writings of American novelist Paul Auster, investigating his literary postmodernity in relation to a full range of his writings. Martin addresses Austers evocation of a range of postmodern notions, such as the duplicitous art of self-invention, the role of chance and contingency, authorial authenticity and accountability, urban dislocation, and the predominance of duality.
Preface
Chapter One: Writing, Self-Invention, Memory: The Residual Modernism of Paul Austers Postmodernity
Chapter Two: Our Lives Are No More Than the Sum of Manifold Contingencies : Paul Austers Ambiguous Postmodern Philosophy
Chapter Three: Every Man is the Author of his Own Life : Postmodern Life-Writing and the Duplicity of Self-Invention
Chapter Four: Dislocation, Ambiguity, Indeterminacy: The Postmodernity of The New York Trilogy
Chapter Five: Postmodern Modes of Social Identity: Paul Austers Evocation of Urban Dislocation, Estranged Solitude, Collective Diversity
Chapter Six: The Authority of Authorship: The Ambiguities of Life-Writing in Leviathan
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Brendan Martin was awarded a doctorate at Queens University Belfast where he specialized in American literature and postmodern theory. He is an Arts Associate Lecturer with the Open University in Ireland and Librarian at St. Marys University College Belfast.