Bodhee Prep-Online CAT Coaching | Online CAT Preparation | CAT Online Courses

Get 10% OFF on CAT 25 Courses. Code: BODHEE10 Valid till 07th April Enroll Now

Daily RC Article 86

Beyond Belated: Literature's Epilogue in the Age of Exhaustion


Paragraph 1

As early as 1758, Samuel Richardson had wondered if the novel were not just a fad, whose time had already run out. By the 20th century, the picture looked far bleaker. Theodor Adorno felt that there could be no poetry after Auschwitz. In 1959, Brion Gysin complained that fiction was lagging 50 years behind painting. In the early 60s, Alain Robbe-Grillet attacked the mummification of the novel in its 19th-century incarnation. In 1967, John Barth published "The Literature of Exhaustion" in which he spoke of "the used-upness of certain forms or exhaustion of certain possibilities". The same year, Gore Vidal diagnosed that the novel was already in its death throes: "we shall go on for quite a long time talking of books and writing books, pretending all the while not to notice that the church is empty and the parishioners have gone elsewhere to attend other gods". The death of literature, and the world as we know it, became a fashionable topic among US academics in the early 90s. Their argument was usually that English departments had been hijacked by cultural studies, Continental theory or political correctness gone mad.

Paragraph 2

Since then, two things have happened. The novel – which was meant to fuse poetry and philosophy, to subsume all other genres and even the entire universe – has been reduced to "literary fiction": a genre that approaches writing as if the 20th century had never happened. At the same time, the digital age has taken information overload to a whole new level. As a result, David Shields believes that the novel is no longer equipped to reflect the vitality and complexity of modern life (Reality Hunger, 2010). Kenneth Goldsmith – the poet to whom we owe the wonder that is UbuWeb – urges us to stop writing altogether in order to focus on recombining the texts we've accumulated over the centuries (Uncreative Writing, 2011). We may all be "remixologists" now, but what if (as Lewis Carroll wondered) word combinations were limited, and we had used them all up?

Paragraph 3

"Even originality itself no longer has the ability to surprise us," writes Lars Iyer in a remarkable essay recently published by The White Review. According to the author of Spurious, we live in "an unprecedented age of words", but one in which Important Novelists have given way to "a legion of keystroke labourers". Literature only survives as literary-fiction kitsch: a "parody of past forms"; a "pantomime of itself". In "The Literature of Exhaustion", Barth had envisaged how the "felt ultimacies of our time" could become the material of future works. Iyer cranks this up a notch. We are no longer writing literature's conclusion but its "epilogue": ours is a "literature which comes after literature". Where Bloom's Romantic poets felt "belated" vis-à-vis their predecessors, Iyer feels that we have come too late for literature, full stop. Literature today is thus no longer "the Thing itself, but about the vanished Thing". The writer's task is "to conjure the ghost" of a tradition that has given it up. By this token, the novels of Tom McCarthy, Lee Rourke and Iyer himself are not so much evidence of a nouveau roman revival as instances of a new type of hauntological fiction which explores the lost futures of Modernism.



This article tracks the evolving perception of the novel's demise, spanning from historical doubts about its endurance to modern claims of its exhaustion in reflecting contemporary life. Observing the reduction of the novel to "literary fiction" and the rise of the digital age, it questions literature's capacity to encompass the complexity of our era. It explores how authors like Iyer view modern literature as an epilogue, a ghostly reflection of a tradition that has moved beyond its former essence.
CAT Verbal Online Course



CAT Online Course @ INR 13999 only
CAT online Courses

FREE CAT Prep Whatsapp Group

CAT 2025 best online courses

Online CAT Courses