The
Novatrilogy, comprised of the novels
The Soft Machine(1961, revised 1966),
The Ticket That Exploded(1962, revised 1967) and
Nova Express(1964), constitutes American novelist William S. Burroughs' most extensive and radical experiment with narrative form. Like most of Burroughs' work during the Sixties, these novels were composed using the “cut-up” method in which existing texts, including Burroughs' own writings and/or writings by other authors, were physically cut into pieces of variable length and re-assembled in random order to generate unexpected juxtapositions and new syntactic relationships. Burroughs developed the cut-up method in collaboration with the Anglo-Canadian painter and novelist Brion Gysin, who derived it from Dadaist and Surrealist techniques of visual…
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Citation: Murphy, Timothy S.. "The Nova Trilogy". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 18 December 2002 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=10822, accessed 22 November 2024.]