Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2024062840> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 70 of
70
with 100 items per page.
- W2024062840 endingPage "177" @default.
- W2024062840 startingPage "159" @default.
- W2024062840 abstract "Recreating Genre:Structure, Language, and Citation in Nathanael West’s The Dream Life of Balso Snell Jason R. Marley Though much has been written on Nathanael West’s corpus, very little critical work exists on West’s first novel, The Dream Life of Balso Snell, a strange, 62-page novella composed of a series of seemingly disjunctive narrative vignettes. As a critical survey of the novel reveals, critics tend to view the novel as an inferior work in a developing writer’s canon—or an interesting, if not derivative, exercise in surrealistic and Dadaist montage. As a result, the novel is rarely considered a site for serious inquiry, and the text as a whole is often overlooked in favor of West’s later novels, Miss Lonelyhearts and Day of the Locust. Recently, however, a number of critics have begun to take note of The Dream Life of Balso Snell’s formal ingenuity. As Deborah Wyrick observes, “Surprisingly, the question of structure in West’s first novel, The Dream Life of Balso Snell, has been largely ignored. Instead, critics agree that it is formless, chaotic, a juvenile pastiche of bathroom jokes, college magazine parody, and borrowings from contemporary avant-garde authors” (156). As Wyrick argues, Balso Snell is not simply a juvenile exercise in pastiche; in fact, a closer look at the form of the novel raises resoundingly complex questions of structure, imitation, and appropriation. Indeed, Balso Snell possesses a dizzying narrative structure, one in which a seemingly interminable number of episodic narrative vignettes emerge only to recede into the background of the text. The complexity of form in the novel, then, is momentously important to understanding West’s aesthetic, and should thus be considered more deeply. My goal in this essay, however, is not simply to rescue West’s work from its critical detractors, but to further the emerging discussion of form in the novel. To that end, I want to consider the extent to which West’s novel can be reconsidered in relation to genre studies—that is, I want to expose how West’s novella reveals a compelling examination of genre in the age of modernism. [End Page 159] Building off Wyrick’s analysis, this essay argues that form functions in West’s novel as a means to examine the limits of genre. In other words, I read formal experimentation in Balso Snell as West’s attempt to self-reflexively rethink and rewrite stagnant generic conventions. Accordingly, I choose to consider the novel not in terms of plot; instead, I suggest that each of the novel’s many vignettes reveal a confrontation with an array of disparate genres. These vignettes reveal a critical examination of literary and generic conventions. Indeed, West’s text incorporates and explores linguistic and textual instabilities through a structure that blends, weaves, and collapses several literary styles and conventions into one another. Throughout the novel, West introduces a multitude of literary genres solely to debilitate and dismantle them. Literary biography, epistolary narration, journalism, and the crime novel all appear in the text—and are all subsequently dismantled and reconfigured. Readers are therefore instigated to reconsider the manner in which we perceive literary conventions by rethinking and reconceiving the boundaries that separate differing genres. Thus, I read West’s novel as a self-reflexive, critical exegesis of conflicting ideologies of genre. By further considering the novel’s formal complexity, we can begin to understand how West’s work interprets the function and conventions of genre in the modern novel. Moreover, as I will show, The Dream Life of Balso Snell confronts the relevancy and longevity of seemingly antiquated genres and, in doing so, reveals a need to rethink the contemporaneity of an array of disparate genres—and the critical practices through which we confront them. Genre, Myth, and Citation West’s novel begins with an immediate citation of the epic as a site of generic play. In a parodic allusion to the epic of the Trojan War, Balso Snell, the novel’s protagonist, comes across the dilapidated ruins of the Trojan horse. In this way, West opens his novel with an overt confrontation of genre. Snell discovers a physical embodiment of the epic and because..." @default.
- W2024062840 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2024062840 creator A5087704045 @default.
- W2024062840 date "2014-01-01" @default.
- W2024062840 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W2024062840 title "Recreating Genre: Structure, Language, and Citation in Nathanael West’s The Dream Life of Balso Snell" @default.
- W2024062840 cites W1991383443 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2014049610 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2041476774 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2045181732 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2061435556 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2081912662 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2166675747 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2322546290 @default.
- W2024062840 cites W2795424115 @default.
- W2024062840 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/sdn.2014.0047" @default.
- W2024062840 hasPublicationYear "2014" @default.
- W2024062840 type Work @default.
- W2024062840 sameAs 2024062840 @default.
- W2024062840 citedByCount "1" @default.
- W2024062840 countsByYear W20240628402019 @default.
- W2024062840 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2024062840 hasAuthorship W2024062840A5087704045 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C127896553 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C199033989 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C2776931063 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C2781095916 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C78015137 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C107038049 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C111472728 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C124952713 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C127896553 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C138885662 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C142362112 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C169760540 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C199033989 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C2776931063 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C2781095916 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C78015137 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C86803240 @default.
- W2024062840 hasConceptScore W2024062840C95457728 @default.
- W2024062840 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W2024062840 hasLocation W20240628401 @default.
- W2024062840 hasOpenAccess W2024062840 @default.
- W2024062840 hasPrimaryLocation W20240628401 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2004127568 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2356286227 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2358417157 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2365215240 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2383315981 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2388026992 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W3150785353 @default.
- W2024062840 hasRelatedWork W4309623886 @default.
- W2024062840 hasVolume "46" @default.
- W2024062840 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2024062840 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2024062840 magId "2024062840" @default.
- W2024062840 workType "article" @default.