The Pre-POST-erous world.
Comparing Gabriel Garcia Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967) to Haruki Murakami’s Kafka on the Shore (2002), this essay argues that Márquez is not employing the postmodern aesthetic merely for some hidden agenda. Like Kafka on the Shore, One Hundred Years of Solitude is characteristi...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-465102019-12-10T14:11:37Z The Pre-POST-erous world. Masita Bakti. Cornelius Anthony Murphy School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English Comparing Gabriel Garcia Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967) to Haruki Murakami’s Kafka on the Shore (2002), this essay argues that Márquez is not employing the postmodern aesthetic merely for some hidden agenda. Like Kafka on the Shore, One Hundred Years of Solitude is characteristically postmodernist as it is a depthless work of art that uses a medley of styles. Through postmodern pastiche, Márquez and Murakami seek to eschew the possibility of meaning that is so important to modernist fiction. Modernist fiction is notably consumed with consciousness and concerned with the meanings and limits of language and knowledge. In contrast, postmodernist fiction revels in what I have called “the pre-POST-erous world” – the absurd, plural world – in order to convey that cognitive questions are imposed too often that there is no answer anymore. Bachelor of Arts 2011-12-13T04:43:36Z 2011-12-13T04:43:36Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46510 en Nanyang Technological University 37 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English Masita Bakti. The Pre-POST-erous world. |
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Comparing Gabriel Garcia Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967) to Haruki Murakami’s Kafka on the Shore (2002), this essay argues that Márquez is not employing the postmodern aesthetic merely for some hidden agenda. Like Kafka on the Shore, One Hundred Years of Solitude is characteristically postmodernist as it is a depthless work of art that uses a medley of styles. Through postmodern pastiche, Márquez and Murakami seek to eschew the possibility of meaning that is so important to modernist fiction. Modernist fiction is notably consumed with consciousness and concerned with the meanings and limits of language and knowledge. In contrast, postmodernist fiction revels in what I have called “the pre-POST-erous world” – the absurd, plural world – in order to convey that cognitive questions are imposed too often that there is no answer anymore. |
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Cornelius Anthony Murphy |
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Cornelius Anthony Murphy Masita Bakti. |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Masita Bakti. |
author_sort |
Masita Bakti. |
title |
The Pre-POST-erous world. |
title_short |
The Pre-POST-erous world. |
title_full |
The Pre-POST-erous world. |
title_fullStr |
The Pre-POST-erous world. |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Pre-POST-erous world. |
title_sort |
pre-post-erous world. |
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2011 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46510 |
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1681036860232564736 |