Giles Goat-boy author took aim against literary norms
ANNAPOLIS, MD. • John Barth, the playfully erudite author whose darkly comic and complicated novels revolved around the art of literature and launched countless debates over the art of fiction, died Tuesday. He was
93.
Johns Hopkins University, where Barth was an emeritus professor of English and creative writing, confirmed his death in a statement.
Along with William Gass, Stanley Elkin and other peers, Barth was part of a wave of writers in the 1960s who challenged standards of language and plot. The author of 20 books including Giles Goat-boy and The Sot-weed Factor, Barth was a college writing instructor who advocated for postmodernism to literature, saying old forms were used up and new approaches were needed.
Barth’s passion for literary theory and his innovative but complicated novels made him a writer’s writer. Barth said he felt like Scheherazade in The Thousand and One Nights, desperately trying to survive by creating literature.
He created a bestseller in 1966 with Giles Goat-boy, which turned a college campus into a microcosm of a world threatened by the Cold War, and made a hero of a character who is part goat.
The following year, he wrote a postmodern manifesto, The Literature of Exhaustion, which argued that the traditional novel suffered from a “used-upness of certain forms.” The influential Atlantic Monthly essay described the postmodern writer as one who “confronts an intellectual dead end and employs it against itself to accomplish new human work.”
He clarified in another essay 13 years later, The Literature of Replenishment, that he didn’t mean the novel was dead — just sorely in need of a new approach.
Barth frequently explored the relationship between storyteller and audience in parodies and satire. He said he was inspired by The Thousand and One Nights, which he discovered while working in the classics library of Johns Hopkins University.
“It is a quixotic high-wire act to hope, at this late hour of the century, to write literary material and contend with declining readership and a publishing world where businesses are owned by other businesses,” Barth told The Associated Press in 1991.