surfiction

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English

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Etymology

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Coined by Raymond Federman in his 1973 manifesto "Surfiction—A Position".

Noun

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surfiction (uncountable)

  1. A style of fiction that rejects realism and advertises its own fictional status, similar to metafiction, postmodernism or fabulation.
    • 2009, Mark McGurl, The Program Era: Postwar Fiction and the Rise of Creative Writing, Harvard University Press, page 9:
      ...it was of a piece with a broader postwar codification and intensification of modernist reflexivity in the form of what came to be called "surfiction" or, more durably, "metafiction."

References

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  • "Surfiction", Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms.