Az Eszterházy Károly Tanárképző Főiskola Tudományos Közleményei. 2000. [Vol. 6.] Eger Journal of American Studies. (Acta Academiae Paedagogicae Agriensis : Nova series ; Tom. 26)
Studies - Judit Ágnes Kádár: A Possible Application of Philosophy in the Study of Recent American Fiction
Humor versus Satire..." 32)". Suckenick underlined the rejection of the illusory time and space in postmodern fiction, which challenges the validity of literature in its own right (9). What is inventive in it is not the subject matter, but the interpretation of the narratives, i.e. the relationship of the author, the text, the reader and reality; basically the variety of realities, truths, that create different paradigms, contexts and connotative meanings. The context the writer imagines and creates is different from the one that appears to the reader. This limitless number of meanings is what makes postmodern writing interesting for many of us, i.e. the tension of no final solutions and conclusions but openness to a wide range of interpretations. WORKS CITED Abádi-Nagy, Zoltán. Válság és komikum: A hatvanas évek amerikai regénye. Elvek és utak. Budapest: Magvető Könyvkiadó, 1982. . "Black Humor Fiction versus Satire in the American Novel of the Sixties." European Contribution to American Studies 9. Berlin: Free UP, 1986. 28-34. Baker, Elliott. A Fine Madness. Boston: Putnam, 1964. Davis, Douglas M. "Introduction: Notes on Black Humor." The World of Black Humor: An Introductory Anthology of Selection and Criticisms. Ed. and intr. by D. Davis. New York: E. P. Dutton and Co., 1967. 13-26. Di Cicco, Pier Giorgio. Virgin Science. Toronto: Maclelland and Steward, 1986. DeVries, Peter. The Blood of the Lamb. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1961. Donleavy, Jean Paul. The Ginger Man. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1968. Federman, Ramond. "Surfiction —Four Propositions in Form of an Introduction." Surfiction: Fiction Now and Tomorrow. Chicago: Swallow, 1975. 5-15. Hassan, Ihab. "Postface 1982: Towards the Concept of Postmodernism. The Dismemberment of Orpheus. Madison, Wise.: U of Wisconsin P, 1982. 259-71. 55