Exercises in criticism: The theory and practice of literary constraint

Item

Title
Exercises in criticism: The theory and practice of literary constraint
Identifier
d_2009_2013:0d35afe7c485:10980
identifier
11332
Creator
Bury, Louis,
Contributor
Wayne Koestenbaum
Date
2011
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Modern literature | applied poetics | conceptual poetry | constraint | creative non-fiction | meta-criticism | oulipo
Abstract
My dissertation is an exercise in applied poetics, using constraint-based methods in order to write about constraint-based literature. I define constraint-based literature as literature that imposes rules and restrictions upon itself over and above the rules and restrictions (such as grammar and lexicon) inherent in language---as literature that understands itself as part of an avant-garde tradition whose most prominent precursor is the work of the OuLiPo, or "Workshop For Potential Literature," a French writing group, founded in 1960 and still active today, whose purpose is to invent arbitrary constraints for the purposes of generating literary texts. When completed, my dissertation will contain ninety-nine short chapters, each of which follows a different compositional procedure. By tracing the lineage and enduring influence of early Oulipian classics, I argue that contemporary Anglophone writers have, in their adoption of constraint-based methods, transformed such methods from apolitical literary laboratory exercises into a form of cultural critique, whose usage is surprisingly widespread in contemporary Anglophone literature, particularly among poets and experimental novelists.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
English