Plotlessness  

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*''[[Bouvard et Pécuchet ]]'' (1881) by Flaubert *''[[Bouvard et Pécuchet ]]'' (1881) by Flaubert
*''[[A Rebours]]'' (1884) by Huysmans *''[[A Rebours]]'' (1884) by Huysmans
 +*''[[Elbow-Room; A Novel Without a Plot]]'' (1876) is a novel by [[Charles Heber Clark]]
 +
===20th century=== ===20th century===
*''[[In Search of Lost Time]]'' (1913 - 1927 ) by Proust *''[[In Search of Lost Time]]'' (1913 - 1927 ) by Proust

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In modernist literature, plot is secondary to philosophical introspection, and the prose can be winding and hard to follow. Taking this to the extreme, we come to the anti-novel of the mid twentieth century.

Contents

Related

boredom - digression - fiction - narratology - abstraction - kitchen sink drama - non narrative - plot - psychological novel - realism - slice of life story - stream of consciousness - sketch story

Plotless literature

18th century

19th century

20th century

Plot-driven literature

thriller

Raymond Carver’s short stories

"I love Raymond Carver’s short stories because they’re complete and perfect without much happening in them, in terms of action and plot development. What I’d like to find is some novels that are similarly “plotless”? Do they exist?
There are Carver stories which are so good you HAVE to finish them, even though all that happens is someone goes to bingo, sees someone else there, goes home, feels sad and goes to bed. I’m looking for novels where the prime reason you keep on reading isn’t to see “what happens” but because you want to spend more time with the characters or the writing itself; ideally books where very little “happens” at all…" --metafilter, March 8, 2005




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