Innocence, Desire, and the Architecture of the Fall : The Grape and Its Counter-Symbols in the Fiction of John Hawkes
Overview
What does a single recurring image reveal about the hidden architecture of a novelist's entire body of work?
Across John Hawkes's sixteen novels, the word "grape" appears 129 times-concentrated in the mature fiction where innocence, desire, and architectural enclosure converge. This monograph traces the grape-its cultivation, its crushing, its fermentation-through the complete fiction of John Hawkes, revealing how its counter-symbols (the Camera, the Wounded Body, the Architecture of Enclosure, and the Child) create a coherent moral architecture across four decades of America's most challenging postmodern writer.
Through meticulous close reading and structural analysis, Jason Holloway maps the symbolic DNA of Hawkes's fiction, demonstrating that beneath the apparent chaos lies precise literary engineering. What emerges is a comprehensive anatomy of literary architecture: how Hawkes built fiction not from plot, but from the spatial and symbolic logic of desire meeting its consequences.
Originally completed as a graduate thesis at Mercy University, this study represents the first comprehensive analysis of motif architecture across Hawkes's complete sixteen-novel corpus. It is essential reading for scholars of postmodern American fiction, students of literary symbolism, and anyone who has wondered what connects The Lime Twig, The Blood Oranges, and Virginie across thirty years of radical experimentation.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798295778247
- ISBN-10: 9798295778247
- Publisher: Sacred Books
- Publish Date: April 2026
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.21 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.28 pounds
- Page Count: 86
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