Annali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie occidentale

Journal | Annali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie occidentale
Journal issue | 53 | 2019
Research Article | “She hangs on the western wall”: Breaking the Myth of the Renaissance in Thomas Pynchon’s V.

“She hangs on the western wall”: Breaking the Myth of the Renaissance in Thomas Pynchon’s V.

Abstract

Since the time of its publication in 1963, Pynchon’s first novel V. has been triggering an intense and still ongoing critical debate upon the function of history and tradition in contemporary literature. As a specimen of postmodern historiographic metafiction, V. enacts complex intertextual strategies, directed at debunking the Western literary tradition, thus questioning its significance in contemporary society. The present contribution aims at extending previous scholarship on the problem of tradition in Pynchon’s fiction, by focusing on the use of the Renaissance in the seventh chapter of V. selected as a case study. Far from marginal, Pynchon’s parodic references to the Italian Renaissance tradition and its cultural artifacts, whether through the artistic productions, or the idea of the Renaissance seen as a pivotal moment of the socio-historical development of the Western world, testify to the process of deconstruction of the paradigmatic role of the Renaissance for the American literary field in the late twentieth century, also in its global and transnational dimension.


Open access | Peer reviewed

Submitted: March 21, 2019 | Accepted: April 26, 2019 | Published Sept. 26, 2019 | Language: en

Keywords HistoryAmerican literatureRenaissanceThomas PynchonPostmodern fiction


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