This essay demonstrates how Bret Easton Ellis’s Glamorama (1998) expresses its critique of late-capitalist consumer culture not primarily through plot or themes, but through prose style, form, and its effects on the reader. Based on Peter Lamarque’s framework for literary aesthetics (2007), this essay analyzes the functions and effects of the affectless tone, excessive listing, graphic violence, and fragmented dialogue that characterize Ellis’s novel. Instead of viewing his style as merely depicting consumer society’s conditions, the essay argues that the formal strategies of parataxis, lists, tonal monotony, and juxtaposition produce an aesthetic of detachment that both defines consumer culture and implicates the reader within it. By close reading of selected passages, the analysis focuses on three stylistic categories: “Catalogues of Consumption”, “Dialogue as Surface Noise”, and “Juxtaposition of Trivial and Traumatic”. The essay argues that Ellis’s prose style erases hierarchies and distinctions between phrases, commodities, people, and violence, while its syntactical and informative overload exhausts, numbs, and forces the reader into a mode of skimming. The effect of these stylistic and formal features is that the reader experiences the indifference and detachment that the novel critiques. Supported by scholarship on blank fiction, consumer culture, and Bret Easton Ellis’s oeuvre, the essay’s relevance lies in its focus on reader implication as an effect of its aesthetic. While much existing criticism reads Glamorama’s critique as dependent on content, themes, and plot, this essay shows that its critique is extended through form by making the reader both exposed to and complicit in the indifference and deadening conditions that characterize consumer culture.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Elvira Szabó Blomberg
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Elvira Szabó Blomberg (Wed,) studied this question.