New Releases by Joseph Tabbi

Joseph Tabbi is the author of The Cambridge Introduction to Literary Posthumanism (2024), Nobody Grew but the Business (2015), Grafik Dynamo (2010), Cognitive Fictions (2002), Postmodern Sublime (1995) and , The Psychology of Machines: Technology and Personal Identity in the Work of Norman Mailer and Thomas Pynchon (1989).

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The Cambridge Introduction to Literary Posthumanism

release date: Aug 31, 2024

Nobody Grew but the Business

release date: May 30, 2015
Nobody Grew but the Business
Finalist, 2016 Society for Midland Authors Award for Biography & Memoir During his lifetime, William Gaddis (1922–1998) evaded biographical questions, never read from his work publicly, and didn’t allow his photograph to appear on his books. Before his novel J R (1975) won Gaddis the National Book Award and some measure of renown, he had given up the bohemian world of 1950s Greenwich Village for a series of corporate jobs that both paid the bills and provided an inside view of the encroachment of market values into every corner of American culture. By illustrating the interconnectedness of Gaddis’s life and work, Tabbi, among his foremost interpreters, demystifies the “difficult author” and shows a writer who was as attuned as any to the way Americans talk, and who sensitively chronicled the gradual commodification of artistic endeavor. Illuminating, heartbreaking, and masterful, Tabbi’s book gives us the most subtly drawn portrait to date of one of the twentieth century’s seminal novelists.

Cognitive Fictions

release date: Jan 01, 2002
Cognitive Fictions
Bringing together cognitive science and literary analysis to map a new "media ecology," Cognitive Fictions limns an evolutionary process in which literature must find its place in an artificial environment partly produced and thoroughly mediated by technological means. Joseph Tabbi provides a penetrating account of a developing consciousness emerging from the struggle between print and electronic systems of communication. Central to Tabbi's work is the relation between the arrangement of communicating "modules" that cognitive science uses to describe the human mind and the arrangement of visual, verbal, and aural media in our technological culture. He looks at particular literary works by Thomas Pynchon, Richard Powers, David Markson, Lynne Tillman, Paul Auster, and others as both inscriptions of thought consistent with distributed cognitive models, and as self-creations out of the media environment. The first close reading of contemporary American writing in the light of systems theory and cognitive science, Cognitive Fictions makes needed sense of how the moment-by-moment operations of human thought find narrative form in a world increasingly defined by competing and often incompatible representations. Book jacket.

Postmodern Sublime

release date: Jan 01, 1995
Postmodern Sublime
Focusing on works by Norman Mailer, Thomas Pynchon, Joseph McElroy, and Don DeLillo, Joseph Tabbi finds that a simultaneous attraction to and repulsion from technology has produced a powerful new mode of modern writing--the technological sublime.

The Psychology of Machines: Technology and Personal Identity in the Work of Norman Mailer and Thomas Pynchon

release date: Jan 01, 1989
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