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D Harlan Wilson

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Occupation
  
Novelist & Professor

Name
  
D. Wilson

Signature
  

Period
  
1999-Present

Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Short story writer

D. Harlan Wilson wwwidentitytheorycomidgraphicsdhwidjpg

Born
  
September 3, 1971 (age 53) Michigan, United States (
1971-09-03
)

Genre
  
Irrealism, Literary Fiction, Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, Interstitial Fiction

Notable works
  
Dr. Identity, Peckinpah, The Kyoto Man

Books
  
Dr Identity, Peckinpah: An Ultraviole, Technologized Desire, Blankety Blank: A Memoir of, The Kafka Effekt

Similar People
  
Carlton Mellick III, Jack Ketchum, William S Burroughs, Ursula K Le Guin, Franz Kafka

the arrest read by d harlan wilson


D. Harlan Wilson (born September 3, 1971) is an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, playwright and English professor. His body of work bridges the aesthetics of literary theory with various genres of speculative fiction, with Wilson also being recognized as one of the co-founders of bizarro fiction." Among his books is the award-winning novel Dr. Identity, the two-volume short story collection Battle without Honor or Humanity, a monograph on John Carpenter’s They Live and a critical study of the life and work of J. G. Ballard.

Contents

D. Harlan Wilson D Harlan Wilson Wikipedia

D harlan wilson reading at dogcon part one


Writing

Wilson began writing fiction in his early twenties when he took a creative writing course with novelist Patricia Powell while enrolled in graduate school at the University of Massachusetts Boston. He has since published more than 20 books of fiction and nonfiction.

Wilson is perhaps best known for Dr. Identity, described by Booklist as a "madcap, macabre black comedy," and the subsequent Peckinpah: An Ultraviolent Romance, both of which he has fancifully categorized as examples of "splattershtick," a literary, comic, ultraviolent form of metafiction. He is also known for helping create and shape the aesthetics of bizarro fiction, which has been described as a "mélange of elements of absurdism, satire, and the grotesque." Many of his books are published by Raw Dog Screaming Press, a small press specializing in bizarro fiction.

Much of his writing satirizes the idiocy of pop culture and western society, illustrating how "the reel increasingly usurps the real." Taken as a whole, his writing is difficult to quantify and he has been said to defy categorization; some critics have called him "a genre in himself." Publishers Weekly has described his fiction as "testosterone-fueled and intentionally disorienting" which "invokes not a dialogue with the reader but a bare-knuckle fistfight."

In addition to writing fiction, Wilson is a prolific reviewer and essayist being frequently published in places such as the Los Angeles Review of Books, the academic journal Extrapolation, and the Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts.

Wilson is editor-in-chief of Anti-Oedipus Press, reviews editor of Extrapolation and managing editor of Guide Dog Books. He is also emeritus editor-in-chief of The Dream People, a journal focused on bizarro fiction where he previously served as editor-in-chief.

Academic Work

Wilson is Professor of English and Unit Head for the Humanities and Social Sciences program at the Lake Campus of Wright State University, where he has been teaching since 2006 after receiving his Ph.D. in English from Michigan State University.

Wilson is the author of Modern Masters of Science Fiction: J.G. Ballard, which is forthcoming in 2017 from University of Illinois Press. His other academic books and works include Cultographies: They Live from Columbia University Press, which the San Francisco Book Review called a "scholarly examination of a cult classic still debated today," Technologized Desire: Selfhood & the Body in Postcapitalist Science Fiction (2009). He has also written a number of scholarly articles on genre fiction along with entries for books such as The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy.

Films

  • The Cocktail Party (2006): Co-written with director Brandon Duncan, this short, animated, rotoscoped film is a highly abstracted and philosophical (post)postmodern meditation on the narcissistic themes of consumerism, redundant self-analysis and rampant hypocrisy. The film won over ten awards, among them Best Animation at ACE Film Festival.
  • Trivia

  • Wilson is a direct descendent of James Fenimore Cooper and brother-in-law of D I Smith of the band Pilots of Japan.
  • References

    D. Harlan Wilson Wikipedia


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