David Foster Wallace cytaty
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David Foster Wallace – pisarz amerykański, autor trzech znanych powieści: The Broom of the System , Infinite Jest i The Pale King . Po polsku ukazały się dotychczas zbiory opowiadań Krótkie wywiady z paskudnymi ludźmi , Niepamięć. Opowiadania oraz zbiór esejów Rzekomo fajna rzecz, której nigdy więcej nie zrobię. Eseje i rozważania , wszystkie w tłumaczeniu Jolanty Kozak oraz w 2019 Blady Król, którego przetłumaczył Mikołaj Denderski.

Wallace wywodził się ze środowiska akademickiego, oboje rodzice byli wykładowcami, on sam także uczył studentów.

Pisał w stylu postmodernistów typu Pynchona, używał mało znanych, „słownikowych” wyrazów, w powieści Infinite Jest mnóstwo jest przypisów. Postaci są często ekscentryczne jak u Johna Irvinga. The Broom of the System to powieść o codziennych potyczkach z życiem 24-letniej pracownicy centrali telefonicznej. Z kolei 1080-stronicowy Infinite Jest dzieje się w Bostonie w niedalekiej przyszłości i porusza szereg tematów dotyczących kultury popularnej, problemów współczesnej cywilizacji, globalizacji, reklamy, ekologii. Tytuł pochodzi z Hamleta. Sztandarowa powieść epoki clintonowskiej.

Popełnił samobójstwo przez powieszenie; od wielu lat cierpiał na depresję. Wikipedia  

✵ 21. Luty 1962 – 12. Wrzesień 2008   •   Natępne imiona دايفيد والاس
David Foster Wallace: 185   Cytatów 0   Polubień

David Foster Wallace: Cytaty po angielsku

“There is actually no such thing as atheism. There is no such thing as not worshiping. Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship.”

Źródło: This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life

“I cannot say what color Lenore Beadsman’s eyes are; I cannot look at them; they are the sun to me.”

David Foster Wallace książka The Broom of the System

Źródło: The Broom of the System

“So yo then man what's your story?”

David Foster Wallace książka Infinite Jest

Źródło: Infinite Jest

“She wanted only tall smooth bottles whose labels spoke of Proof.”

David Foster Wallace książka Infinite Jest

Źródło: Infinite Jest

“Be on guard. The road widens, and many of the detours are seductive.”

David Foster Wallace książka Infinite Jest

Źródło: Infinite Jest

“They can kill you, but the legalities of eating you are quite a bit dicier.”

David Foster Wallace książka Infinite Jest

Źródło: Infinite Jest (1996)

“She was terrified of everything, and terrified to show it.”

David Foster Wallace książka Brief Interviews with Hideous Men

Źródło: Brief Interviews with Hideous Men

“… perversely, it is often more fun to want something than to have it.”

David Foster Wallace książka Infinite Jest

Źródło: Infinite Jest

“It is extremely difficult to stay alert & attentive instead of getting hypnotized by the constant monolog inside your head.”

Źródło: This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life

“If Realism called it like it saw it, Metafiction simply called it as it saw itself seeing itself see it.”

E Unibus Pluram: Television and U.S. Fiction
Essays
Źródło: A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again: Essays and Arguments
Kontekst: The emergence of something called Metafiction in the American '60s was hailed by academic critics as a radical aesthetic, a whole new literary form, literature unshackled from the cultural cinctures of mimetic narrative and free to plunge into reflexivity and self-conscious meditations on aboutness. Radical it may have been, but thinking that postmodern Metafiction evolved unconscious of prior changes in readerly taste is about as innocent as thinking that all those college students we saw on television protesting the Vietnam war were protesting only because they hated the Vietnam war (They may have hated the war, but they also wanted to be seen protesting on television. TV was where they'd seen the war, after all. Why wouldn't they go about hating it on the very medium that made their hate possible?) Metafictionists may have had aesthetic theories out the bazoo, but they were also sentient citizens of a community that was exchanging an old idea of itself as a nation of do-ers and be-ers for a new vision of the U. S. A. as an atomized mass of self-conscious watchers and appearers. For Metafiction, in its ascendant and most important phases, was really nothing more than a single-order expansion of its own theoritcal nemesis, Realism: if Realism called it like it saw it, Metafiction simply called it as it saw itself seeing it. This high-cultural postmodern genre, in other words, was deeply informed by the emergence of television and the metastasis of self-conscious watching.