Creativity and science in contemporary argentine literature : between romanticism and formalism
Autor
Page, Joanna
Institución
Resumen
In British and North American literature since the 1960s, models and the-
ories from mathematics and science – incompleteness, uncertainty, entropy,
chaos, and complexity – have most often been put to use in forging apoca-
lyptic visions of social and cultural decay or of an incomprehensible universe
that lies beyond the limits of our science. These theories seem to speak to
a postmodern skepticism concerning any genuine advance in knowledge
and, at the same time, any possibility of artistic regeneration. They have lent
force to the postmodern sense of an ending, or impasse, bringing to a halt
the drive of modernist progress towards greater knowledge, freedom, and
creativity. This is the vision assembled in the fiction of Thomas Pynchon
and J. G. Ballard, for example, in which the uncertainty principle renders
futile all human efforts to understand the unhomely universe in which we
are trapped, and the thermodynamic process of entropy seems to command
an inexorable decline in every area of psychological, social, and cultural
experience.