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      Reading the Ghost in David Foster Wallace’s Fiction

      Orbit: A Journal of American Literature
      Open Library of Humanities

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          Abstract

          In this article I argue that the figure of the ghost, a surprisingly regular presence in David Foster Wallace’s fiction, represents an attempt to address problems of authorial presence, character autonomy, generational influence and monologism. I locate Wallace’s position within the critical debate over the effacement of authorial presence, before establishing a developmental theory of possession and ghostliness across Wallace’s body of fiction from his first novel The Broom of the System to his short story collection Oblivion. I subsequently argue, with reference to Bakhtin’s theory of polyphony and the drafts of Wallace’s work in the Harry Ransom Centre, that Wallace’s “apparitions” gradually effect a new mode of “ghostly” authorial presence in the text that seeks to move away from monologic approaches to narrative. The essay concludes by suggesting that a model of ghostly “co-authorship” can be discerned in the drafts of Wallace’s final novel, The Pale King.

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              Understanding David Foster Wallace

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10.16995/orbit.208
                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                Literary studies,History
                Literary studies, History

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