Don Delillo Essays

  • Don Delillo

    1848 Words  | 4 Pages

    publication of his first novel, Americana (1971), Don DeLillo (b. 1936) has been recognized as among the most important writers of his generation. Don Delillo demonstrates the theme of a corrupt society through his assessment of isolation, the quest of discovering self- image, and the drive toward creating a sense of doomsday. In his work, Don Delillo explores isolationism and its capacity to reveal the corruptness practices in society. Delillo tends to place themes in his writings that express

  • White Noise, by Don Delillo

    1632 Words  | 4 Pages

    Webster’s dictionary defines a distraction as a mental turmoil. Don Delillo, the author of the novel White Noise shows how distractions are nothing more than a mental turmoil towards the characters in the novel and this is proved in several different circumstances. The characters use distractions to avoid accepting the problems they come across in their everyday lives. The many distractions that the characters in the novel make use of are used to help them avoid their lack of spiritualism, their

  • Themes in White Noise by Don DeLillo

    2251 Words  | 5 Pages

    (Oakeshott) The idea of the lacking of realness is one of the major themes carried out throughout the novel White Noise by Don DeLillo, especially through the device of the television. “For most people there are only two places in the world. Where they live and their TV set. If a thing happens on television, we have every right to find it fascinating, whatever it is.” (DeLillo 66) The television in the novel White Noise is portrayed almost as a character and plays a significant role in the lives

  • How Does Don Delillo Create Tension In White Noise

    1170 Words  | 3 Pages

    Death Conquers All The novel White Noise by Don DeLillo is an extraordinary book for Our Time. It explores many themes such as the fear of death and the tension between reality and artifice, both of these themes the main character Jack experiences throughout the novel. DeLillo also attempts to establish a connection through the reader and the novel by creating these themes that are relatable and that can be complex, yet easily understood. Many of the events that take place in the novel may not happen

  • Compare And Contrast Walt Whitman's Leaves Of Grass And Don Delillo

    709 Words  | 2 Pages

    Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass and Don DeLillo’s White Noise were written over a century apart. In that time there was a significant change in the mentality between what it was to be an American and how much of a person’s identity was a part of their nationality. Over time, the American people have created a more negative outlook on society. While Whitman remains more positive and proud of being an American, DeLillo has adapted a more cynical perspective. There are several poems from Walt Whitman’s

  • The Failure of Technology in White Noise by Don Delillo

    1050 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Failure of Technology in White Noise by Don Delillo One particularly unfortunate trait of modern society is our futile attempt to use technology to immunize ourselves against the fear of death. The failure of technology in this regard is the general subject of Don Delillo''s book White Noise. Throughout this novel, technology is depicted as the ominous messenger of our common fate, an increasing sense of dread over loss of control of our lives and the approach of inevitable death in spite

  • Psychological Comfort in Don Delillo´s White Noise

    907 Words  | 2 Pages

    outstanding technology has brought human to a bright new age that people are more likely to value the materiality. Then more problems are raised from the technological development and further implicated with human emotions and basic desires. For example, in Don Delillo's novel "White noise", the fear of death is emphasized and given a new definition that fits into this lopsided modern society, which is overwhelmed by all kinds of information from mass media. People unconsciously dedicate more onto the stories

  • Don Delillo Videotape

    1489 Words  | 3 Pages

    A major uncertainty in life is knowing the exact moment when you’ll take your last breath on earth, whether it is on your terms or not. Don DeLillo’s “Videotape” (1994) focuses on a videotape that is at times narrated by the man viewing it at home. The tape begins with a young girl who is sitting in the backseat of her parent’s car. She is shown filming a man that is driving behind them in a vehicle produced by Dodge. As it continues the man is shown waving at the young girl who is filming him. At

  • Dislocation in Cosmopolis: DeLillo

    1915 Words  | 4 Pages

    the utopia became dystopia. They particularly explored the cultural causes of terrorism. DeLillo investigates the role of various groups in society. Ian McEwan was one writer who responded to the attacks with his novel Saturday (2005) Cosmopolis is particularly interesting because it narrates and offers a careful and detailed account of the description of people and places. in the turn of the century. DeLillo was very much preoccupied with America is shown as a hybrid society inhibited by multinational

  • Theme of Death in White Noise

    1099 Words  | 3 Pages

    White Noise Death is probably the most feared word in the English language. Its undesired uncertainty threatens society’s desire to believe that life never ends. Don DeLillo’s novel White Noise tells the bizarre story of how Jack Gladney and his family illustrate the postmodern ideas of religion, death, and popular culture. The theme of death’s influence over the character mentality, consumer lifestyle, and media manipulation is used often throughout DeLillo’s story. Perhaps, the character most

  • White Noise

    1310 Words  | 3 Pages

    In Don DeLillo’s eighth novel: White Noise, warmly accepted by critiques, the author exposes, that the money gained colossal meaning during our time, plunging down other values like freedom of customer choice and respect for shoppers. In his work of fiction he illustrates how current world of commerce impacts our minds by manipulating our decisions, and also he indicates that a human nature demonstrates immense vulnerability for such attack. Moreover the ubiquitous commercials lead us to desire of

  • Don Delillo's White Noise

    659 Words  | 2 Pages

    White Noise by Don DeLillo presents a significant literature piece created to catch people’s attention and develop awareness regarding contemporary American culture’s catastrophe. In his work, the author raised various questions which he had foreseen being vital in the nearest future. Amongst those questions are the place of media in American culture, fear of death, family values evolution, commercialism, the place of legal, illegal, drugs, violence and tragedy, loss of faith in academia, religion

  • Fear Of Death In Don Delillio's White Noise

    1058 Words  | 3 Pages

    that the media is the source of fear of death. This is important because it shows how media shaped what they were afraid of and had the potential to shape what jack and his family thought and how it consumed their identity. One of the major focuses of Don DeLillio's White Noise is death. In this novel DeLillio over emphasizes the concept of death and the fear mankind has of it. He plays on our fear of death and the reality and certainty we have of our own demise. How much do television, radio and other

  • Videotape: Don DeLillo’s Illustration of Postmodernism

    1087 Words  | 3 Pages

    Don DeLillo’s ‘Videotape’ is a short story of man who is absolutely captivated by some footage on the news that can be described as both, raw and shocking. The footage is being repeatedly played over and over. It depicts a young girl with a camcorder travelling in the backseat of her family’s car who happens to be filming a man driving a Dodge behind them. She continues aiming the camera at the man and filming until, suddenly, he is shot and murdered. The man watching the tape at home is clearly

  • The Power of the Family in White Noise

    1150 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Power of the Family in White Noise Don Dellilo's protagonist in his novel "White Noise," Jack Gladney, has a "nuclear family" that is, ostensibly, a prime example of the disjointed nature way of the "family" of the 80's and 90's -- what with Jack's multiple past marriages and the fact that his children aren't all related. It's basically the antipodal image of the 1950's "nuclear family." Despite this surface-level disjointedness, it is his family and the "extrasensory rapport" that he

  • The Futile Goal of Nicholas Branch in Don DeLillo's Libra

    865 Words  | 2 Pages

    According to author Don DeLillo, the immense quantity of the information pertaining to the heinous crime committed in Dallas on November 22nd of 1963 will never lead to or reveal a comprehensive and conclusive version of the event. In his novel Libra, DeLillo acknowledges the impossibility of collecting and studying the extensive evidence of the assassination and how this seemingly inexhaustible process is essentially responsible for creating more doubt and disorder in the case. DeLillo shows the irrelevance

  • American Consumerism: Don Delilo’s White Noise

    1908 Words  | 4 Pages

    In Don Delilo’s, White Noise different themes are displayed throughout the novel. Some themes are the fear of death, loss of identity, technology as the enemy, and American consumerism. The society represented in the novel views people as objects and emotionally detached from many things. Death is always in the air and trapped in peoples mind. The culture that’s represented in the novel adds to the loss of individualism, but also adds to the figurative death of the characters introduced in the novel

  • Jack and Technology

    1540 Words  | 4 Pages

    Don Delillo’s White Noise explores one mans emotional struggles, and his love/hate relationship with technology in twentieth-century America. The novel takes place in Blacksmith, a small college town with a college known as the College-on-the-hill. Jack Gladney, the narrator and main character, is known to be “a big, aging, harmless, indistinct sort of guy”(83) He is an accomplished family man, a professor at the College-on-the-hill, a husband wanting to please his wife, someone who struggles with

  • Zombie Consumerism in "White Noise"

    602 Words  | 2 Pages

    effectively operates as an “empty signifier,” in “whatever” fashion—and those who do not”(p.126). Boluk, Stephanie (Ed.) Lenz, Wylie (Ed.) (2011) Generation Zombie: Essays on the Living Dead in Modern Culture. McFarland & Co Inc.; New York; English DeLillo, Don. White Noise (novel) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Accessed on March 29, 2014

  • Features of Metafiction and Well Known Writers of the Genre

    3035 Words  | 7 Pages

    The reader of a metafiction raises the question-which is the real world? The ontology of “any fiction is justified/validated/vindicated in the context of various theories of representation in the field of literary art and practice. Among these theories the seminal and the most influential is the mimetic theory. The theory of mimesis (imitation) posits that there is a world out there, a world in which we all live and act, which we call “the real world”. What fiction does (for that matter any art)