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Mid-Atlantic Popular &
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In G.O.D. We Trust: The Desert of the Religious in David Foster Wallace's Early Works

Presenter: 
Vernon W Cisney (Gettysburg College)
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

Although the influence of Søren Kierkegaard’s thinking upon Wallace’s work has been addressed – in particular by Marshall Boswell and Allard Den Dulk – the bulk of these treatments has focused primarily on the theme of irony. Den Dulk, for example, expands upon Boswell’s treatment of the concept of irony in Wallace’s work as an existential mode of comportment, arguing that ‘liberation from irony is only possible through (what Kierkegaard calls) a “leap,” by “ethically” choosing one’s freedom, by choosing the responsibility to give shape and meaning to that freedom.’ However insofar as this reading remains at the level of the ‘ethical’, it fails to address the question of the religious leap which, for Kierkegaard at least, is the paradigmatic question of existence. In this paper I explore the question of the religious in Wallace’s work through the theme of the Great Ohio Desert (G.O.D.) in The Broom of the System. Like Kierkegaard’s notion of God, an absurdity at the heart of the self, the Great Ohio Desert is ‘an Other for Ohio’s Self,’ a place of contrast, black sand, and desolation – at the center of Ohio, at the center of America – ‘a point of savage reference for the good people of Ohio.’ And like Kierkegaard’s understanding of God, it is in the desert that Lenore confronts Rick, and hence, it is this desert that truly brings Lenore into an authentic sense of herself.

Scheduled on: 
Thursday, November 8, 11:00 am to 12:15 pm

About the presenter

Vernon W Cisney

Vernon Cisney is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Gettysburg College. His areas of research include contemporary continental philosophy, and philosophy of film and literature. He is the author of Derrida’s Voice and Phenomenon: An Edinburgh Philosophical Guide (Edinburgh University Press, 2014); as well as Deleuze and Derrida: Difference and the Power of the Negative (forthcoming, Edinburgh University Press, 2018).

Session information

David Foster Wallace

Thursday, November 8, 11:00 am to 12:15 pm (Salon D Calvert Ballroom)

David Foster Wallace’s (1962-2008) writing is situated at the intersections of literature, philosophy, television, cinema, popular culture, postmodernism, and social criticism. The author of the 1079-page masterpiece, Infinite Jest, Wallace explores the human experience through the ethos of the American dream, exposing and challenging its illusory seductions and their concomitant tendencies toward addiction and self-destruction, with a rare mixture of fearlessness and insight. His work thus continues to provide invaluable provocation on the questions of who we are, and who we can be.

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