Raymond Federman

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Raymond Federman (born 1928) is a FrenchAmerican novelist and academic, known also for poetry, essays, translations, and criticism. He held positions at the University at Buffalo from 1973 to 1999, where he is now Distinguished Emeritus Professor. Federman is a writer in the experimental style, one that seeks to deconstruct traditional prose. This type of writing is quite prevalent in his book Double or Nothing, in which the linear narrative of the story has been broken down and restructured so as to be nearly incoherent. Words are also often arranged on pages to resemble images or to suggest repetitious themes.

He was born in Montrouge, France, and emigrated to the U.S. in 1947. He studied at Columbia University and as a graduate at U.C.L.A., where he earned a doctorate in comparative literature on Samuel Beckett. He is also a co-founder of the Fiction Collective, a publishing house dedicated to experimental fiction and its writers.

[edit] Works

  • Journey into Chaos: Samuel Beckett's Early Fiction (1965)
  • Among the Beasts / Parmi Les Monsters (1967)
  • Samuel Beckett, His Works and His Critics: An Essay in Bibliography (1970) (with John Fletcher)
  • Double or Nothing (1971)
  • The Voice in the Closet (1979)
  • Me Too (1975)
  • Surfiction: Fiction Now and Tomorrow (1975) (editor)
  • Take It Or Leave It (1976)
  • The Twofold Vibration (1982)
  • To Whom It May Concern (1990)
  • Now Then / Nun denn (1992) (poems)
  • Critifiction: Postmodern Essays (1993)
  • Smiles on Washington Square (1995)
  • The Supreme Indecision of the Writer: The 1994 Lectures in Turkey (1995)
  • Loose Shoes (2001)
  • Aunt Rachel's Fur (2001)
  • The Song of the Sparrow (2002)
  • Here and Elsewhere: Poetic Cul de Sac (2003)
  • The Precipice and Other Catastrophes (2003)
  • My Body in Nine Parts (2005)
  • The Twilight of the Bums (with George Chambers)

[edit] External links