1. “Variations on a Theme”: the (re)Invention of the Human in Vas: An Opera in Flatland Sylvie Bauer (Université Rennes 2, France) 2. The Great American Novel: System Update Kathi Inman Berens (University of Southern California, Annenberg School of Communication, USA) 3. Tomasula's Book R. M. Berry (Florida State University, USA) 4. Fabrications in a Complex Mirror: Steve Tomasula's Turbulent Fiction Gerald Bruns (University of Notre Dame, USA) 5. Literary Archaeologies in The Book of Portraiture Flore Chevaillier (Central State University, USA) 6. The Material Is the Message: Body as Text/Text as Body in Steve Tomasula's VAS: An Opera in Flatland Anthony Enns (Dalhousie University, Canada) 7. A Book, an Atlas, and an Opera: Steve Tomasula's Fictions of Science as Science Fiction Pawel Frelik (Maria Curie-Sklodowska University, Lublin, Poland) 8. Spatiality and Print, Temporality and Digital Media: Media-Specific Strategies in Steve Tomasula's The Book of Portraiture and TOC N. Katherine Hayles (Duke University, USA) 9. The Work of Art After the Mechanical Age Mary Holland (SUNY, New Paltz, USA) 10. Intermediality in Steve Tomasula's TOC: A New Media Novel: A Semiological Analysis Anne Hurault-Paupe (Paris 13 University, France) 11. Exploration and Discovery Through Visuality in Steve Tomasula's The Book of Portraiture Pelin Iscan (University of Strasbourg, France) 12. Do We Not Bleed? The Color of Flesh in a Cyborg World Anne Larue (University Paris 13-Sorbonne Paris Cité, France) 13. Ontological Metalepses, Unnatural Narratology, & Locality: A Politics of the [[page]] in Tomasula's VAS & TOC Lance Olsen (University of Utah, USA) 14. 'Still, It Moves' : The Subreal Fiction of Steve Tomasula Jackie Orr (Syracuse University, USA) 15. Enumeration in Steve Tomasula's Short Stories Françoise Palleau-Papin (University of Paris 13-Sorbonne Paris Cité, France) 16. Encoding the Body, Questioning Legacy: Reflections on Intersemiotic Experiments in Steve Tomasula's VAS: An Opera in Flatland Françoise Sammarcelli (University of Paris Sorbonne, France) 17. Steve Tomasula's Work of Wonder Anne-Laure Tissut (Rouen University, France) Afterword—An Interview with Steve Tomasula Bibliography Index
The first book devoted to Steve Tomasula, bringing together scholars in fields ranging from contemporary experimental writing and literary criticism to the history of science, biotechnology and bioart, book studies, and digital humanities.
David Banash is Professor of English at Western Illinois University, USA. He is the author of Collage Culture: Readymades, Meaning, the Age of Consumption (2013) and co-editor of Contemporary Collecting: Objects, Practices, and the Fate of Things (2013). His essays and reviews have appeared in American Book Review, Bad Subjects: Political Education for Everyday Life, Science Fiction Studies, Paradoxa, PopMatters, Postmodern Culture, Reconstruction, and the Iowa Review.
David Banash and this excellent collection do more than bring Steve
Tomasula’s astounding work to a wider audience. This book reveals
the multiform layers of interlacing aesthetics that, like a tumor,
a clock, a biological accident, and the birth of the alphabet,
assemble into patterns that are playful, enigmatic, and wondrous.
Tomasula was once the best-kept secret in contemporary narrative.
Now, his work is suitably viral.
*Davis Schneiderman, Associate Dean of the Faculty and Professor of
English, Lake Forest College, USA, and &NOW Board Member*
A groundbreaking collection of essays on an author who is at the
cutting edge of experimental fiction in the twenty-first
century.
*Marcus Boon, Professor of English, York University, Canada, and
author of In Praise of Copying (2010)*
Steve Tomasula’s eco-hybrid, post-cyber, transmedia fiction works
are as hard to characterize as they are engaging. Only a
genetically engineered polydactyl would have enough thumbs to
signal the enthusiasm generated by the digerati-literati lucky
enough to have encountered them in the first decade of the new
millennium. Varied and eclectic, sui generis and virtuosic,
Tomasula’s major works get their due in this volume as a wide range
of authors, eager and equal to the task, position his activities
within the critical discourses proliferating at the intersection of
creative thought and literary philosophy.
*Johanna Drucker, Professor of Information Studies, University of
California, Los Angeles, USA*
What is a work that arrives before it is written? What is a work
that emerges from the soft tissue of the body at different points
in a given era? How do make a new kind of writing derived from the
oscillation between two rectangles of light; frames that might
include surveillance, animal ethologies and anatomies, as much as a
philosophy of the book-to-be? This extraordinary anthology
constellates readings of Tomasula novels and intermedia projects
that offer us a glimpse of the novel as installation, as 'nature
opening out to culture.' As someone interested in what happens at
the intersection of narrative and biology, the instance of mutation
as a trait transmitted between and across texts of different kinds,
I was very inspired by the essays in this remarkable collection.
David Banash has curated something that makes it possible to come
to writing again, differently. The introduction, co-written with
Andrea Spain, was, itself, a fierce and brilliant consideration of
'composition, emergence, sensation': the intense, unpredictable and
sometimes violent energies that underlie Tomasula’s work in its
incipient stages, but also carry it through a duration. Which is
prose. Which is this other kind of radical art. An art or novel
that appears only when we orient towards it. In this way.
*Bhanu Kapil, Associate Professor of Writing, Naropa University,
USA, and author of Ban en Banlieue (2015)*
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