We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Conditional Narrative and False Starts: The Potentiality of the Incipit in Italo Calvino's If on a Winter's Night a Traveller and Raymond Federman's Smiles on Washington Square.
- Authors
de Zwaan, Victoria
- Abstract
“Experimental fiction," “unnatural fiction," “anti- or counter-realist fiction": These terms refer to a wide range of fictions that have in common a metafictional (or “surfictional," or “critifictional") impulse to disrupt conventional reading practices of absorption and trust, as well as to deconstruct storytelling conventions that create a stable “possible world," whether of the realist or fantastic variety. In this article, I compare the ways in which Italo Calvino, in “If on a Winter's Night a Traveller" (1979) and Raymond Federman, in “Smiles on Washington Square" (1985) develop very different experimental metafictions based on a shared idea that the incipit of a text carries with it all of its possible, or more precisely probable, generic, and plot manifestations. In Calvino's case, each of the many “first chapters" that his protagonist-Reader encounters is identified by specific genre requirements that dictate the possibilities for action. In Federman's story, the action is mobilised by the possibility (later “retracted") of a brief encounter between two people passing each other on the street. My reading of these texts will also examine their emergence out of the OULIPO school in the case of Calvino, and out of 1960's post-Beckettian American metafiction in the case of Federman.
- Subjects
FEDERMAN, Raymond; FICTION writing techniques
- Publication
International Journal of Literary Humanities, 2016, Vol 14, Issue 4, p25
- ISSN
2327-7912
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.18848/2327-7912/cgp/v14i04/25-37