We See History Through a Glass, Abjectly, in Infinite Jest

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
David Foster Wallace’s 1996 novel Infinite Jest presents a version of postmodern myth that is mediated through film, television, and other commercial entertainments. This media landscape is hostile, grotesque, and self-referencing. Its recursivity corrupts the chain of narrativization that transforms reality into history into myth. In the novel, the newly formed Organization of North American Nations coopts the preexisting culture industry in order to create a new, updated mythos and identity in service of its nationhood. The myths that it manages to produce are bizarre, non-linear, and illegible. This myth-making machine, using (fictional) history as its source material, seems unable to make meaningful or unifying narratives about the North American people of Infinite Jest. This is because the nascent government coopts the culture industry as the medium for myth, which leads the North American people to understand the culture industry itself to be their new mythic inheritance. This situation resembles Francis Fukuyama’s proposed End of History. An important characteristic of post-History is the loss of art. Individuals in this post-Historical position are at risk of losing the ability to describe their historical context or understand their identity as one among a collective of people. I argue that this landscape can be described through abjection, as defined by Julia Kristeva and elaborated by N. Katherine Hayles. I additionally use Roland Barthes’ definition of myth, Marshall McLuhan’s definition of media, Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer’s critique of the culture industry, and Mikhail Bakhtin’s formalist method to aid my analysis of mythic entertainments that appear in the novel, which I term intratexts.

Description

Type of resource text
Date modified December 5, 2022
Publication date August 9, 2022; May 12, 2022

Creators/Contributors

Author Gordon, Julia
Thesis advisor Algee-Hewitt, Mark
Thesis advisor McGurl, Mark
Degree granting institution Stanford University
Department Department of English

Subjects

Subject Infinite Jest
Subject Wallace, David Foster
Subject Kristeva, Julia, 1941-
Subject End of History
Subject Fukuyama, Francis
Subject McLuhan, Marshall, 1911-1980
Subject Adorno, Theodor W., 1903-1969
Subject Horkheimer, Max, 1895-1973
Subject Bakhtin, M. M. (Mikhail Mikhaĭlovich), 1895-1975
Subject Barthes, Roland
Subject Hayles, N. Katherine, 1943-
Subject Abjection in literature
Subject Mass media in literature
Subject Television in literature
Subject Motion pictures in literature
Subject Formalism (Literary analysis)
Subject Narratology
Subject Myth in literature
Subject Myth in mass media
Subject Semiotics and literature
Subject Liberalism in literature
Subject Television advertising
Subject Commercial art
Subject Ideology in literature
Subject Motion picture industry in literature
Subject Culture Industry
Genre Text
Genre Thesis

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Preferred citation
Gordon, J. (2022). We See History Through a Glass, Abjectly, in Infinite Jest. Stanford Digital Repository. Available at https://purl.stanford.edu/ft767zz6367

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Stanford University, Department of English, Undergraduate Honors Theses

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