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Arkadiusz Misztal on Playing Games with Time: Temporal Imagination, Soft Clocks, and Dreamworlds in Mason & Dixon and Bleeding Edge

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April 12, 2016
All Day
202 Denney Hall

Time: 4 p.m.
Event Host: Project Narrative / Hum Institute
Short Description: Arkadiusz Misztal, Project Narrative visiting scholar from the University of Gdansk, will speak on time, temporal imagination and dream worlds in the work of Thomas Pynchon.


Arkadiusz Misztal, Project Narrative visiting scholar from the University of Gdansk, will speak on time, temporal imagination and dream worlds in the work of Thomas Pynchon in his talk "Playing Games with Time: Temporal Imagination, Soft Clocks, and Dreamworlds in Mason & Dixon and Bleeding Edge."

This talk addresses the problematic of narrative and temporal modality in Thomas Pynchon’s fiction, by looking at the concept of “dream time” and its application in the construction of micro-worlds in Mason & Dixon (1997) and Bleeding Edge (2013). Misztal will argue that despite the dominance of spatial over temporal categories in these two texts, Pynchon’s counterfactual imagination -- which informs and shapes these narratives -- can be best understood in terms of playful and subversive sensibilities, which, among other things, seek to open up different, alternative perspectives on past, present and future.  Focusing on oneiric subjunctivity and narrative shifts into the counterfactual mode in Pynchon’s novels, I will discuss how specific conceptions of time -- such as multiple, parallel time dimensions, time travel and temporal trespassing -- within the organizational structure of the novels create narrative configurations in which apparently different temporal zones coexist and/or slide into one another.  This generative and transformative mobility of Pynchon’s imaginative thought allows for fictional re-imagination of time and space, thus countering the "temporal grid" and other temporal regimes of contemporary technological culture. 
 
Arkadiusz Misztal is Assistant Professor in American Studies at the University of Gdańsk.  His research and teaching interests focus on contemporary American fiction, literary theory and philosophy of time.  He has published on Paul Auster, Samuel Beckett, Don DeLillo and Thomas Pynchon.  He is currently completing a book on time, narrative and temporal representation in works by Thomas Pynchon.

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