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Volume 1, No.
2 - July 15, 2000
Table of
Contents
From
the President
The Don DeLillo Society
exists to facilitate new scholarship on the works
of Don DeLillo and to promote his reputation in the
scholarly community. The appearance of two new
books this year, and two more in the works (see
Events),
promises a good deal for the future. Still, we
should act as both a clearing house and a source of
inspiration. We can do so by continuing to maintain
an updated Bibliography,
which functions as an invaluable resource for
scholars. The DDS should also strongly encourage
the participation of both veteran and less
experienced scholars. We should attempt to generate
annual panels for the Twentieth-Century Literature
Conference and the American Literature Association
Conference, and continue to propose special
sessions at the MLA conference. I would especially
encourage interested scholars to propose panels for
the regional MLAs, which are often hungry for good
topics.
The DDS should generate
programs that will direct attention to previously
underrecognized areas of research. For example, I
would like to see more attention paid to DeLillo's
earlier works, including his short fiction and
plays; more scholarship on topics such as gender,
language and style, and on the intertextual
relationships between DeLillo's works and those of
his contemporaries and predecessors, both American
and international. Once The Body Artist
appears in February, 2001, we should seek to
organize a panel about it for one of the above
mentioned conferences.
And let us not forget that
author societies should also be a venue for
collegial interaction and friendships. In short, we
should also have fun! Party on, College on the Hill
Alumni!
Mark
Osteen
A
Message from the Outgoing
President
Why did we start the Don
DeLillo Society? It's obvious. DeLillo's fiction is
where our obsessions dwell. And with good reason.
DeLillo's work represents an important commentary
on American national identity and the condition of
postmodernity. In forming this society, we wished
to foster sustained and serious scholarship on
DeLillo's impressive body of fiction.
DDS therefore was
constituted to provide forums not only for the
celebration of DeLillo's artistic vision but also
to begin to map the limitations of that
vision.
Thanks to everyone who
helped make the formation of the DDS so painless.
Phil Nel, Glen Scott Allen, and Joseph Conte were
all wonderful to work with in planning stages. What
have we accomplished? Well, we have a name and for
those of you who recall the flurry of discussion on
that matter, you are intimately acquainted with
just how fraught the act of naming can be. I'm
pleased that in our first year we've established
ourselves with the American Literature Association.
This affiliation will serve, I hope, to give DDS a
credibility that will allow for the future
exploration of MLA author society
status.
I'm pleased that Mark
Osteen has assumed the leadership of DDS and know I
join all of you in offering him both our best
wishes and the promise of any support he may
request in the future.
John
Duvall
DDS
Sponsors Panel at Twentieth-Century Literature
Conference
The Don DeLillo Society
sponsored its first panel on "Don DeLillo and
Postmodern Media Culture" at the Twentieth-Century
Literature Conference at the University of
Louisville on February 26, 2000. The selected
papers addressed the interaction of postmodern
media culture and terrorism in DeLillo's work.
Although terrorists and terrorism are frequently
represented in DeLilloÌs novels, the papers
inquired into the readiness with which terror
arises in our media-saturated, technologically
"advanced" epoch. (For summaries of the papers,
click here.)
The panel was organized
and chaired by Joseph Conte, Treasurer of
the DDS, who distributed information about Society
membership, our website, and proposed panels at the
American Literature Association conference in Long
Beach, CA and the Modern Language Association
convention in Washington, DC later this
year
Glen Scott Allen,
Editor of the DDS Newsletter, presented on
"Senseless Acts of Violence: Don DeLillo and the
Mad Text of Terror." Focusing on Mao II, Allen
discussed fictional and real acts of terrorism as
"raids on human consciousness" that compete with
other texts for our attention. Allen argued that,
whereas the Powers That Be wish to consider
terrorist acts "mad speech" without meaning or
communicative value, DeLillo suggests that the
overdetermined self-referenciality of postmodern
language creates the same sort of nonlocal, random,
ubiquitous sense of terror.
William Robert next
presented "Explain Me to Myself: Displacement and
Self-Media(iza)tion in Underworld and Valparaiso."
He discussed the prominence of the technology of
waste in Underworld, suggesting that garbage arises
first in any civilization, forcing the invention of
new technologies to cope with its accumulation.
Waste is present as a kind of underhistory. Drawing
on Derrida, Robert argues that the economy of the
archive institutes cultural history
Anthony Miller
offered selections from his alphabetically
organized presentation "Decoding DeLilloÌs
Decades of Dietrologia: An Underworld Alphabet."
Inspired by Lenny Bruce, Miller's amusing remarks
ranged from American voices and baseball to the
Zapruder film. Dietrologia, he tells us, is the
science of dark forces, what is behind an event,
its latent history. "Lists are a form of cultural
hysteria."
Finally, Jeff
Karnicky presented "Wallpaper Mao: Don DeLillo,
Andy Warhol, and Seriality." Karnicky drew careful
parallels between the seriality and repetition of
Warhol's famous pop art canvases and the
proliferation of images, especially on TV, in
DeLilloÌs fiction. TV functions as an
attractor, and Warhol, who preferred television to
close relationships with other people, is himself
wounded by a disgruntled groupie the day before
Bobby Kennedy is assassinated after a televised
appearance.
The panel was very well
attended, including appearances by Phil Nel, our
Secretary, Kathryn Hume, and John Krafft,
co-founder of Pynchon Notes. Questions and
comments on the papers were quite lively. In all,
the panel was a successful inaugural event for the
Society.
Joseph
Conte
From
the Editor:
Obviously, this second
issue of the Newsletter is ... well ...
deadline-challenged. However, given the rousing
expression of faith in the current Editor by the
Society's membership (never mind that there were no
other nominations), I'll take this opportunity to
promise greater regularity in future
editions.
In the first issue, I
asked for contributions such as letters to the
editor, comments, etc. I repeat that request. It
strikes me that this Newsletter is an excellent
forum for the exchange of comments about books and
articles on DeLillo, reviews, and all manner of
commentary less formal than full-fledged academic
essays. I hope the next issue will inaugurate both
Letters to the Editor and Comments/Reviews
sections.
With this request in mind,
I offer October 31st as a firm publication date for
the next issue, and ask that any/all contributions
reach me no later than October 15th. This hypertext
version of the Newsletter is available to anyone. A
text-only version will be sent upon request, as
will a hardcopy version for those without access to
(or interest in) all things online.
If you have information,
questions or letters for the next issue, please
send them to me at sallen@towson.edu
no later than October
15th, 2000.
Glen Scott
Allen
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