In "The Prestige of Violence" Sally Bachner argues that,
starting in the 1960s, American fiction laid claim to the status of
serious literature by placing violence at the heart of its mission
and then insisting that this violence could not be represented.
Bachner demonstrates how many of the most influential novels of
this period are united by the dramatic opposition they draw between
a debased and untrustworthy conventional language, on the one hand,
and a violence that appears to be prelinguistic and unquestionable,
on the other. Genocide, terrorism, war, torture, slavery, rape, and
murder are major themes, yet the writers insist that such events
are unspeakable. Bachner takes issue with the claim made within
trauma studies that history is the site of violent trauma
inaccessible to ordinary representation. Instead, she argues, both
trauma studies and the fiction to which it responds
institutionalize an inability to address violence.
Examining such works as Vladimir Nabokov's" Pale Fire," Thomas
Pynchon's "The Crying of Lot 49," Norman Mailer's "Armies of the
Night," Margaret Atwood's "Surfacing," and Philip Roth's "The Plot
Against America," Bachner locates the postwar prestige of violence
in the disjunction between the privileged security of wealthier
Americans and the violence perpetrated by the United States abroad.
The literary investment in unspeakable and often immaterial
violence emerges in Bachner's readings as a complex and
ideologically varied literary solution to the political geography
of violence in our time.
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