(1986) is Philip Roth’s thirteenth novel. It won the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction and was rapidly recognized as one of Roth’s most significant achievements. In it, Roth explores all his favourite subjects – sex, love, emotional crises, social constraints, dreams of escape, Jewishness, and the idea of the self as a performance.
The Counterlifeis one of the Zuckerman novels: i.e., the novels in which Roth’s alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman, provides him with the means of re-imagining reality in ways that tease readers out of thought by conflating life and fiction. The book has also been characterized as Roth’s wholehearted embrace of postmodernism, but his interest in the sort of self-reflexiveness that flaunts artifice is different in kind from the…
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Citation: Rampton, David. "The Counterlife". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 15 September 2009 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=21004, accessed 21 November 2024.]