Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Barthelme, Donald - Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1992)
Barthelme, Donald - Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1992)
Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1992)
SOURCE: Stengel, Wayne B. “Irony and the Totalitarian Consciousness in Donald Barthelme's Amateurs.” In Critical Essays on Donald Barthelme, edited by Richard F. Patteson, pp. 145-52. New York: G. K. Hall & Co., 1992.
[In the following essay, Stengel analyzes three representative stories from Amateurs in order to differentiate Barthelme's early and later short fiction and to explore the relationship between irony and human consciousness in his work.]
At his best Donald Barthelme was a highly moral and political American short story writer. Moreover, for a decade or so—from the mid-sixties to the late seventies—in a plentiful, inventive stream of stories that often appeared first in the New Yorker, Barthelme challenged and enlarged the possibilities for short story form and short story expression. As the seventies proceeded, Barthelme's imaginative energies altered...
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Criticism
- Morris Dickstein (essay date 1977)
- Paul Bruss (essay date 1981)
- Lois Gordon (essay date 1981)
- Frank Burch Brown (review date 31 March 1982)
- Maurice Couturier and Regis Durand (essay date 1982)
- Larry McCaffery (essay date 1982)
- Charles Molesworth (essay date 1982)
- Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1985)
- John Domini (essay date winter 1990)
- Charles Baxter (essay date autumn 1990)
- Ewing Campbell (essay date fall 1990)
- Stanley Trachtenberg (essay date 1990)
- Brian McHale and Moshe Ron (essay date summer 1991)
- Jerome Klinkowitz (essay date 1991)
- Barbara L. Roe (essay date 1992)
- Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1992)
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