Postmodern Book: Proposal
Colson Whitehead's John Henry Days explores the relationship between fact and fiction with a postmodern narrative structure. One of the characteristics of postmodernism is the way in which it destabilizes what constitutes 'the known.' John Henry, according to American legend, was an African-American man who challenged a steel engine in a contest of who could work the hardest. Henry won, but died in the attempt. The saga of Henry is paralleled with that of a contemporary, young African-American journalist named J. Sutter, who seems to be everything the Henry of legend was not. Sutter is a dilettante journalist who puts little effort into anything, other than finagling free food at press events. However, like Henry, he is struggling with the changes in his profession in the new technological revolution.
The novel fluidly draws associations between the mythic past and present. Just as Henry's era struggled in terms of its ability to understand how human worth would now be valued in the age...
Rather than straightforward 'progress' in a positive sense, there is always a sense of loss as well as something that is gained, as a result of change. That sense of loss may be a false nostalgia that is more about myth than reality. This is seen as various characters reminisce about John Henry or reflect on what he meant to them.
As an African-American who faces racism, despite the officially 'post-racial' society in which we live, Sutter's struggles to find his identity also are postmodern in nature. Sutter has a fragmented self-image. He feels distanced from the concerns of many African-Americans because he is reasonably well-off, and educated, but his white colleagues do not fully embrace him as one of their 'own,' either. He feels drawn to the figure of Henry, and even purchases a large statue of Henry at one point.
The novel uses multiple lines of narrative to explore the meaning…
Postmodern Literature Final In terms of the use of experimental techniques in the assigned readings this semester, I think I would judge Vonnegut to be the best and Ishmael Reed to be the worst. The simple criterion here is accessibility. There is no reason why experimental writing should be difficult or a chore to read. The constant emphasis on a surface level of linguistic novelty in Ishmael Reed makes the actual
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