University Press Copublishing Division / Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Pages: 198
Trim: 6¾ x 9¾
978-1-61147-411-4 • Hardback • March 2010 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
Marco Codebo is assistant professor of French and Italian at Long Island University.
In order to explore the relationship between the novel and the archive from early modernity to the dawn of the digital age, Codeb<'o> (French and Italian, Long Island U., New York) focuses on the archival novel, a fiction genre in which the narrative stores records, bureaucratic writing informs language, and the archive functions as a semiotic frame that structures the text's content and meaning. Among his topics are Balzac's die humaine/> or the epic of the archive, the brilliant stupidity of the archive in cuchet/> by Gustave Flaubert, and by Don DeLillo as an example of the archival novel in the autumn of the paper archive.
— Book News, Inc.
With the rise of postmodernism, the relationship between fiction and the archives has become an important area of scholastic exploration. Marco Codebo takes this exploration in new and intriguing directions in Narrating from the Archive.
— The American Archivist