Chronoschisms

In Chronoschisms Ursula Heise explores the way developments in transportation, communication and information technology have led to the emergence of a new culture of time in Western societies. The radical transformation in our understanding and experience of time has also profoundly affected the structure of the novel. Heisse argues that postmodern novels are centrally concerned with the possibility of experiencing time in an age when temporal horizons have been drastically foreshortened. Drawing on theories of postmodernism and narratology, she shows how postmodern narratives break up the concept of plot into a spectrum of contradictory story lines. The coexistence of these competing experiences of time then allows new conceptions of history and posthistory to emerge, and opens up comparisons with recent scientific approaches to temporality. This wide-ranging study offers new reading of postmodernist theory and fresh insight into the often vexed relationship between literature and science.

• First book to look at how changes in time have affected the postmodern novel • Explores the intersection between literature, science, and technology • Offers a thorough historical perspective, a detailed comparison of modern and postmodernist culture

Contents

Introduction; Part I. Chronoschisms: 1. From soft clocks to hardware: narrative and the postmodern experience of time; Part II. Time Forks and Time Loops: 2. Number, chance and narrative: Julio Cortázar’s Rayuela; 3. ‘Repetitions, contradictions and omissions’: Robbe-Grillet’s Topologie d’une cité fantôme; 4. Print time: text and duration in Beckett’s How It Is; Part III. Posthistories: 5. ∆t: time’s assembly in Gravity’s Rainbow; 6. Effect predicts cause: Brooke-Rose’s Out; Epilogue: Schismatrix; Bibliography.

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