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David Foster Wallace News and Resources Since March 97

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Consider David Foster Wallace: A Conference

Another conference! This one is in the UK. David Hering based at the University of Liverpool has got in touch with details. Greg Carlisle (author of the excellent IJ resource Elegant Complexity) is a confirmed keynote speaker.
 
From David:

The passing of the writer David Foster Wallace in September 2008 presents not only a tragic and significant loss to the literary world, but also an important opportunity to consider the impact and magnitude of the remarkable body of work he leaves us. From the irreverency and piercing social commentary of his journalism in A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again and Consider The Lobster to the monumental, sprawling majesty of his gargantuan novel Infinite Jest, Wallace's writing is increasingly considered to be one of the most significant literary canons of the second half of the twentieth century.

On 29-30th July, The University Of Liverpool is hosting an international conference devoted to discussion and scholarly appraisal of Wallace's work. Papers of 20 minutes duration are welcome on any aspect of Wallace's fiction or non-fiction. Depending on response, there may also be places available for non-scholars who wish to attend the conference (although it is likely at this stage that only scholars will be permitted to give papers).

Confirmed Keynote Speaker:

Greg Carlisle (Morehead State University, Kentucky) – Greg Carlisle is the author of Elegant Complexity , the most extensive and detailed published study of Wallace's novel Infinite Jest available.

Abstracts of approx. 250 words and any enquiries about the conference should be sent to David Hering at the University of Liverpool at the following email address: D.Hering (at) liverpool.ac.uk  (replace the at with @ and remove the surrounding spaces) by Friday 22nd May 2009.

 
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Last Updated on Monday, 02 March 2009 16:58
 

Update - Footnotes: New Directions in David Foster Wallace Studies

An update from Judd about the NY conference later this year,
 
We've set up the following email address for any queries about the conference, paper proposals, etc.:  footnotesconference (at) gmail.com (replace the at with @ and remove the surrounding spaces) Would you mind putting that on your website? I appreciate it.
 
WHAT: "Footnotes: New Directions in David Foster Wallace Studies."
 
WHERE: The Martin E. Segal Theatre, CUNY Graduate Center, 365 5th Ave, NY, NY.
 
WHEN: Friday, November 20th, 2009 (a date of no small significance in the Infinite Jest chronology: hope there isn't too much snow!), 9 AM - 5 PM.
 
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Last Updated on Monday, 02 March 2009 16:56
 

The Unfinished Novel - The Pale King

More from the New Yorker, this time about DFW's unfinished third novel [quoted from the essay below] -which Little, Brown plans to publish next year—expands on the virtues of mindfulness and sustained concentration.
 
Two pages from the manuscript of 'The Pale King' and artwork from David Foster Wallace's wife, Karen Green.
 
The Unfinished, D. T. Max's amazing essay about DFW including details about his third novel, 'The Pale King'.
 
Spoiler Note: If you have not yet read/finished Infinite Jest or The Broom of the System be careful, there are a number of spoilers, including the final lines from both novels. There is also substantional info about 'The Pale King' so be careful re: its publication next year.
 
The essay is a tremendous and moving read with substantial reference to DFW's life and works (but watch the spoilers).
 
(The previous post Wiggle Room, is an excerpt from the unfinished novel).
 
Edit: I've been updating this post while reading D. T. Max's essay. It was not an easy read, particularly its closing pages.
  
Confirmed excerpts from 'The Pale King':
 
Good People - The New Yorker Feb 2007 (Shares a character with Wiggle Room, Lane Dean Jr.)
The Compliance Branch (link to pdf) - Harper's Magazine Feb 2008 (First at Le Conversazioni 2006 as untitled excerpt from something lomger that isn't even close to halfway finished yet)
Wiggle Room - The New Yorker March 2009 
Irrelevant Bob (? Speculation: from the note at the top of page one) Page 1 , Page 2 - The New Yorker March 2009
 
Possible excerpts (pure speculation, but based on DFW's reference to them as fragments):
 
Three fragments from a longer thing available as an audio reading by DFW and a transcribed pdf.
 
and
 
A 'fragment' DFW read at the New Mexico State University in 2007. It was about "a father/husband who was killed when part of him got caught in the closing doors of a subway train, and his family's attempts to deal with it". The reading was at least 30 minutes. (Thanks to Evan who contacted me about this back in 0ct 08, this is still a mystery, did anyone else hear it?)
 
 
Research for 'The Pale King'
 
A research quote from the New Yorker Essay:

Wallace began the research for “The Pale King” shortly after the
publication of “Infinite Jest.” He took accounting classes. He studied
I.R.S. publications. “You should have seen him with our accountant,”
Karen Green remembers. “It was like, ‘What about the ruling of 920S?’
” He enjoyed mastering the technicalities of the I.R.S.
bureaucracy—its lore, mind-set, vocabulary.

Remember this old conversation from 1998 between Gus Van Sant and DFW
from Dazed and Confused?

DFW: I'm on leave this year. I'm auditing a class but I'm not
teaching. The class I'm auditing is a real bitch but somehow I'm
holding on at a high C or low B.

GVS: What's the class?

DFW: It's ah, it's advanced tax accounting, which is a long story and
you probably don't want to know about it but it's wa-a-a-y over my
little noggin'. It's a Will Hunting class.

GVS: Oh my God.

DFW: 35 pages of incredibly dense, you know, CPA stuff at night and
then you get tested on it the next day.

Full conversation: http://www.badgerinternet.com/~bobkat/dazed.html
 
 
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Last Updated on Sunday, 01 March 2009 16:05
 

New DFW Story: Wiggle Room

The New Yorker has published a new DFW short story: Wiggle Room.
 
Edit: It is an excerpt from his unfinished novel, 'The Pale King'
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Last Updated on Sunday, 01 March 2009 12:23
 

Conference - Footnotes: New Directions in David Foster Wallace Studies.

WHAT: "Footnotes: New Directions in David Foster Wallace Studies."
 
WHERE: The Martin E. Segal Theatre, CUNY Graduate Center, 365 5th Ave, NY, NY.
 
WHEN: Friday, November 20th, 2009 (a date of no small significance in the Infinite Jest chronology: hope there isn't too much snow!), 9 AM - 5 PM.
 
Thanks, Judd
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Update 25th Feb

A big 'thanks' to everyone who sent in small .pdf files of the Whiskey Island Interview. A new small (36kb, thanks, Zack) pdf has been added to the (outdated) Interviews page. If anyone can add to the list of print interviews (either updates for broken links or new links) drop me a line.
 
To answer all the questions about the linkable (but unreadable without subscription) Modernism/modernity DFW tribute, a wallace-l member did all the legwork (thanks, Mark!). You can buy a single print issue (in the US at least) by calling their toll-free number (800-548-1784). Order is by credit card and I understand the cost is $14.00, plus $3.00 shipping (to the US I assume).
 
Final call for the Canberra DFW fan meetup. Only a handful of replies so far (as expected) if you are interested in joining us for a social evening soon let me know so we can finalise a date, time and inner-city location.
 
 
 
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 24 February 2009 20:43
 

Rain Taxi Essay

The online edition of the Rain Taxi Review of Books is hosting a great essay by Tim Jacobs called, "The Fight: Considering David Foster Wallace Considering You."
 
Well worth your time, the final paragraph is wonderful.
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Last Updated on Sunday, 13 September 2009 20:04
 
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