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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
26 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Post-Modernist and Funny as Hell,
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This review is from: White Noise: Text and Criticism (Viking Critical Library) (Paperback)
In "White Noise" DeLillo proves himself to be the Balzac of the contemporary era, particularly that of america suburbia. Very basically it portrays the negative effects of technology on our society. Overwhelmed by information, we become anesthesized to our environment....we must filter out some the data that bombards our system, and indeed we filter out most of it. Our systems so burdened by the information that we treat all things with indifference....except for our own death, which remains the one thing we would like to filter out of our consciousness but dont seem able to do so.Now, this all recalls the dry writings of Heidegger or Baudrillard, but instead DeLillo will have you laughing til you cry with certain passages. We have a Professor who is head of the "Hitler Studies" department (one thing about information overload is that people specialize in minutiae). His colleague, Murray, who philosophizes over food labels, wants to start an "Elvis Studies" department. The concept of the "hyperreal" is evoked. For example, there is a tourist site near the college. It has no other appeal than the fact that it is the "most photographed barn" in America. Throughout the book we see the characters, just like many of us, concentrate on image rather than substance. I have noticed that there is a review below by a man that claims that neither he nor his "brilliant" wife the engineer found anything of interest in "White Noise". I, too, am an engineer and know, by the way, that most engineers find themselves (often victims of self-deception) "brilliant". I speculate that the reason they could not understand this book is that they are too submerged in the "white noise" world of consumerism and information. In addition to that many engineers are afraid to address the issue of the dark side of technology.
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic Novel--Redundant Critical Essays.,
By
This review is from: White Noise: Text and Criticism (Viking Critical Library) (Paperback)
White Noise is one of the greatest postmodern novels ever written, and I will never look at academia (or the supermarket) the same way again. The critical essays, however, lack variety. Perhaps too little time has passed to give perspective on DeLillo's work, but the essayists in this volume continually focus on the same inidents and ideas from similar critical perspectives. No doubt this book will endure long enough for a more multifaceted critical edition to surface. For now, enjoy the novel itself as a brilliant social critique done with style and humor.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Get this edition!,
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This review is from: White Noise: Text and Criticism (Viking Critical Library) (Paperback)
I've sometimes asked myself why I don't get a library card and save the money I spend buying books. This book answered that question, because the reviews and essays featured in this edition provided such insight and enlightenment that I was inspired to return to the novel again and again for a more penetrating read.
The novel itself is beautifully, brilliantly written; DeLillo is a master ironist. Though I thoroughly enjoyed the novel the first time, I highly recommend revisiting it after reading the critical essays (which were so informative that they were quite enjoyable reads themselves). If you're going to read White Noise outside of a college class, this is the edition you should get.
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