Steve Tomasula is an American novelist, critic, short story, and essay author known for cross-genre narratives that explore conceptions of the self, especially as shaped by language and technology.
Biography
Steve Tomasula grew up along the industrial border between East Chicago and the South Side of Chicago, the locale used as the setting in his novel IN&OZ. He received his M.A. and Ph.D. in English from the University of Illinois, Chicago. While working on his first novel, he taught in the Middle East. After his return, he joined the faculty at the University of Notre Dame, where he is currently a professor of English. Tomasula lives with his wife, the artist Maria Tomasula, in South Bend, Indiana, and Chicago.
Works
Tomasula is the author of four novels, a collection of short fiction, and numerous essays and short stories. His fiction is a hybrid of multiple genres and is noted for its use of visual elements and nonfiction narratives. His writing can be characterized as postmodern and has been called a "reinvention of the novel" for its formal inventiveness, play with language, and incorporation of visual imagery. Though he is mostly known for his novels, his short fiction and essays also take up similar themes, especially the depiction of the self as a construction of society. His first novel, Vas: An Opera in Flatland is an adaptation of Edwin Abbott's 1884 novel Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions. It uses Abbott's characters Square and Circle and the flat, two-dimensional world in which they live to critique contemporary society during the rise of genetic engineering and other body manipulations. His second novel, The Book of Portraiture is a prequel to VAS. It tells the story of "portraiture" in chapters that move across several centuries, for example: a desert nomad inventing an alphabet to depict himself in words; a Renaissance painter depicting nobility; and a 20th-century security expert using surveillance cameras and data-mining techniques to compose portraits of employees. TOC: A New-Media Novel is a multimedia novel published on DVD and as an iPad app. A collage of text, animation, music, and other art forms, TOC explores competing conceptions of time that shape human lives: historical time, cosmic time, geological time, personal and biological time. IN&OZ is an allegory of four artists and an auto mechanic. It has been compared to George Orwell's Animal Farm for its class-consciousness as it follows the story of people trying to find a way to live authentically in a world where individuality is squeezed out by mass-market thought. Tomasula's short fiction and essays have been included in many literary magazines, including McSweeney's, Bomb, and The Iowa Review. A collection of his short fiction, Once Human: Stories, gathers a number of stories that are thematically linked by conceptions of the self as it is shaped by science, technology, and cultural change. His essays on innovative and conceptual literature, body art and genetic art have appeared in journals such as The Review of Contemporary Fiction, The New Art Examiner and Leonardo. Critical volumes in which his essays have been published include The Routledge Companion to Experimental Literature ; Data Made Flesh: Embodying Information, and Musing the Mosaic. He has given key-note addresses or invited readings from his fiction at numerous universities and institutions, including the Library of Congress in the U.S., and, in Europe, Université Paris 8, Plymouth University, Paris Sorbonne University, and the University of Constantine the Philosopher.
Critical reception
The American Book Review described VAS: An Opera in Flatland as "a leap forward for the genre we call 'novel.'" Also in The American Book Review, the literary historian Steven Moore wrote that The Book of Portraiture is "brilliant.... The overarching theme of representation and self-portraiture, from cave art to computer code, gives this novel a historical sweep that is breathtaking." Bookforum described it as "a grand historical account," explaining that The Book of Portraiture "reimagines what the novel, particularly the historical novel, might mean in the digital world, and it does so with verve, gusto, and style." TOC: A New-Media Novel received a Gold Medal, Best Book of the Year in the eLit Awards, and the Mary Shelley Award for Excellence in Fiction. Tomasula's short fiction was awarded the Iowa Prize for most distinguished work published in any genre; it was also published in the 2005 Harper Collins anthology of Year's Best SF and other anthologies. Tomasula's novels are the subject of numerous scholarly and critical conference panels and essays including The Body of Writing: An Erotics of Contemporary American Fiction by Flore Chevaillier, How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis by N. Katherine Hayles. and Steve Tomasula: The Art and Science of New Media Fiction by David Banash. In 2011 he was named a Howard Fellow.