1st Edition

The Problem of Free Will in David Foster Wallace

By Paolo Pitari Copyright 2024
286 Pages
by Routledge

286 Pages
by Routledge

286 Pages
by Routledge

This book argues that David Foster Wallace failed to provide a response to the existential predicament of our time. Wallace wanted to confront despair through art, but he remained trapped, and his entrapment originates in the "existentialist contradiction": the impossibility of affirming the meaningfulness of life and an ethics of compassion while believing in free will. To substantiate this... Read more

Preface: The problem of free will             

 

Introduction: The problem of free will in David Foster Wallace    

 

Part one: Literary truth according to David Foster Wallace

 

Chapter 1: The influence of Leo Tolstoy’s What Is Art? on David Foster Wallace’s literary project             

 

Chapter 2: The influence of Jean-Paul Sartre’s “What Is Literature?” on David Foster Wallace’s literary project    

 

Part two: The problem of free will in David Foster Wallace’s literary sociology           

 

Chapter 3: The system of David Foster Wallace’s literary sociology            

 

Chapter 4: On narcissism: David Foster Wallace and Christopher Lasch    

 

Chapter 5: On morality and the absurd: David Foster Wallace and Zygmunt Bauman             

 

Chapter 6: On existentialism and capitalism: David Foster Wallace and Ulrich and Elisabeth Beck         

 

Chapter 7: On ontological insecurity: David Foster Wallace and Anthony Giddens             

 

Part three: The problem of free will in David Foster Wallace’s fiction: A comparative reading of Fyodor Dostoevsky and David Foster Wallace      

 

Chapter 8: A critical history of the philosophical criticism on Fyodor Dostoevsky and David Foster Wallace     

 

Chapter 9: Fyodor Dostoevsky, Mikhail Bakhtin, and David Foster Wallace: United in existentialism

 

Chapter 10: The problem of free will in Crime and Punishment and The Pale King      

 

Bibliography     

 

Index

Biography

Paolo Pitari completed a joint PhD in English at the Ca’ Foscari University of Venice and at LMU Munich. He is the author of numerous academic articles in literature and philosophy. This research was funded by the University of Venice, the JFK Institute of Freie Universität Berlin, and the DAAD.

"Pitari’s argument is daring, challenging accepted arguments of the past that Wallace found a 'cure'  for loneliness and postmodern nihilism."

Ándrea Laurencell Sheridan, State University of New York (Orange)

"Pitari’s original translations of Severino’s works contribute to his novel and insightful reading of one of the most important American writers of the last fifty years."

Alessandro Carrera, University of Houston

"The clarity and concision of Pitari’s writing style, and the care and precision of his reasoning, make The Problem of Free Will in David Foster Wallace a fascinating and insightful read."

Dion A. Forster,Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

"Paolo Pitari’s incisive study takes seriously the claims about truth and freedom at the heart of Wallace’s writing and evaluates them by the most rigorous philosophical standards. More impressively still, The Problem of Free Will in David Foster Wallace offers an original analysis of its subject’s literary sociology, making it one of the most important interdisciplinary texts on Wallace to date."

-Adam Kelly, Head of Teaching and Learning, University College Dublin, Ireland