A Thomas Pynchon Bibliography of Secondary Materials
- Qualification
- Abstracts
- Total Records
- 73
Gilles Chamerois. The Incorporation of, Among Other Things, America in Against the Day
Gilles Chamerois. Pynchon, Leone, and Dynamite
Ali Chetwynd. Pynchon's Vocabulary of Curves: Circular Motion Metaphors Beyond the Rocket Arch
Ali Chetwynd. Inherent Obligation: Ethical Relations and The Demands of Patronage in Recent Pynchon
Matthew Cissell . Locating Pynchon in the Literary Field : A Critique of Reviews of Against the Day
William Clarke. 'It’s My Job, I Can’t Back Out': The ‘House’ and Coercive Property Relations in Pynchon’s Vineland
Colin Clarke. Exploding the Western: Pynchon, Wister, and Cooper
Francisco Collado-Rodriguez. Science, Intertextuality, and the Role of V. in Pynchon’s Against the Day: (or the Literary Effects of Trauma in Contemporary America)
Fabienne Collignon. A Vortex, Inside Light
Inger Dalsgaard. Fast Forward/Rewind: Against the Direction of Time
Simon de Bourcier. Travels in the Fourth Dimension in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day
Simon de Bourcier. The Æther in Against the Day
Kate Delaney . Hoop dreams: the soundtrack of Inherent Vice
Manlio Della Marca. 'All That Is Solid Melts Into Air': Between Hardware and Software. Memory and Signs in Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49
Nina Engelhardt . Mathematics, Reality and Fiction in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day
Giuseppe Episcopo . Time Overdrive / Space Override – Pynchon Antinomies
Martin Eve . ‘It sure’s hell looked like war’: Terrorism and the Cold War in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day and Don DeLillo’s Underworld
Jola Feix . Reading Against the Day with the Chums of Chance
Joanna Freer . Daylit Fictions and Dark Conjugates: The Political Role of Fantasy in Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49 and Against the Day
Pawel Frelik. Always judge a book by its cover : reading Pynchon’s paratexts
Lovorka Gruic-Grmusa. Intrigue, Revenge and Bloodshed: Mapping the Balkans in Against the Day
Lovorka Gruic-Grmusa. The Symbolism of Light and Darkness in Against the Day
Richard Hardack. 'Say Something Once, Why Say It Again?': Eternal Return and Free Indirect Radicalism in Against the Day
Michael Harris. The Tao of Thomas Pynchon
Michael Harris. Pynchon and Race: V. Reconsidered
Doug Haynes . The Virtues of Vice: 'Black Humour’ in Inherent Vice and Beyond
Maximilian Heinrich . Roads Not Taken: Historical Crossroads And Their Potential In Against the Day
Luc Herman. Race in Early Pynchon: Rewriting Sphere in V.
Nick Holdstock . “Can you tell me, please, where is reality?”: Imagined Utopias in Inherent Vice
Charles Hollander. Pynchon, Satire and the Moral Instinct
Tiina Käkelä-Puumala. ”There Is Money Everywhere”: Representation, Authority, and the Money Form in Against the Day
Zofia Kolbuszewska. Heliography and Paramorphosis: Thomas Pynchon’s DeLIGHTful Counter-Narratives
Robert Lacey . Pynchon on Totalitarianism: Power, Paranoia, and Preterition in Gravity’s Rainbow and The Crying of Lot 49
Douglas Lannark. The Year of the Metal Tiger
Jessica Lawson. 'The Real and Only Fucking is Done on Paper': Penetrative Readings and Pynchon's Sexual Text
David Letzler . Pointsman and the Preterite: On Character and Theology in Gravity’s Rainbow
Clément Lévy. As Far as Thomas Pynchon 'Loves Cameras'
Clément Lévy. “Back to Gondwanaland!” or, Pynchon’s Myths of Earth
Georgios Maragos. 'A Medium no Longer': How Communication and Information Become Objectives in Thomas Pynchon's Works
Georgios Maragos. Moving Images: Light-capturing Technologies, Reality, and the Individual in Thomas Pynchon’s Twentieth Century
Xavier Marcó del Pont . Paranoid Reading: Narrative Structure and Organisational Devices in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day and Inherent Vice
Arkadiusz Misztal . Varied Modes of Detection: a Forensic Investigation into Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49 and Inherent Vice
Seán Molloy . Between and Beyond Bakunin and Nietzsche: Thomas Pynchon and the Politics of Transcendence
Matthias Mosch . Faust and the Faustian in Gravity’s Rainbow
Richard Moss . Ernst Bloch‘s European Reichs in Pynchon’s Imagined Europe
J. Paul Narkunas. Time's Fractured Arrows: Pynchon's Against the Day, Ethnic Genocide, and the 'Macedonian Question'
Keith O'Neill. 'Against the Master': Pynchon's Wellsian Art
Keith O'Neill. Inherent Vice’s Monster Mash: Pynchon and the Gothic
Frank Palmeri. Plutocratic Dystopia, Anarchist Utopias in Pynchon’s Against the Day
Mark Quinn. In the Shadow of the Masters: Dante, Joyce and Pynchon
Terry Reilly. Narrating Tesla in Against the Day: I.G.L.O.O., H.A.A.R.P., and Other Forms of Ionospheric Weirdness
Terry Reilly. Hans Kammler and Gravity’s Rainbow: Or, The Kammlerstab Takes a Road Trip
Michel Ryckx. Abundancy and Dialogue in Pynchon Criticism: A Possible Model for a Computed Secondary Bibliography
Jeffrey Severs. Pynchon’s Dogs
Jeffrey Severs. “The abstractions she was instructed to embody”: Women and Capitalism in Against the Day
Jesse Sherwood . Pynchon’s Wild West: The American Myth in Against the Day and Other Works
Steven Showers. Mathematics in Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day
Paolo Simonetti. “Bye bye Black Dahlia”: Thomas Pynchon and the Inherent Vice of detective fiction
Michael Sinding. Crusades Begin as Pilgrimages: Pynchon’s New Medievalisms
Michael Sinding. Framing Monsters: Pynchon’s Multiple and Mixed Genres
Pawel Stachura . Literary Spaces in Pynchon, Strugatskie, and Dukaj
Toon Staes. 'When You Come to a Fork in the Road' – Marcuse, Gravity’s Rainbow and Against the Day
Rodney Taveira. 'Shadow Factories': Allegorical Technologies of Entertainment in Against the Day
Samuel Thomas. Metkovi: Pynchon and the Balkans
Gary Thompson. Performing Pynchon
Petrus van Ewijk. The ARPAnet Trip: The Network from Gravity’s Rainbow to Inherent Vice
Birger Vanwesenbeeck. The Crying of Lot 49 and the Politics of Mourning
Dara Waldron . Thanatoids and Death by Television: Politics and/of the Spectacle in Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland
Celia Wallhead. Kit and Kim: Espionage in Against the Day
Celia Wallhead. The ineludible flaws in hippiedom and fascism in Thomas Pynchons' Inherent Vice
Huei-ju Wang . The Figure of the Private Eye in Pynchon from The Crying of Lot 49 to Inherent Vice
Charley Wesley. Realism, Surrealism, and Awe: The Artistic Expression of Thomas Pynchon and Neo Rauch