Research Article
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Babbling as Resistance in Don DeLillo’s The Silence

Year 2026, Issue: 5, 75 - 85, 26.01.2026

Abstract

Drawing on poststructuralist theories, this article asks what becomes of contemporary epistemology and ontology when digital technology collapses, as portrayed in Don DeLillo’s The Silence (2020). Dialogue at the beginning of this novel reveals the extent to which each character’s thoughts have been conditioned by the regimes of capital and digital signification. When DeLillo’s characters attempt to speak apart from the discourse of technology that has structured their knowledge and language, their speech becomes incoherent noise, or babbling. However, when read through Attali’s formulation of noise as subversion and Deleuze and Guattari’s concept of deterritorialization as an escape from hegemonic language, babbling emerges as a form of speech that can resist technological dominance by disrupting the demand to make sense. As DeLillo’s characters face the loss of meaning and turn towards silence, they enact the resistant potential of thinking with silence rather than with technology. By foregrounding silence and babbling as processes that subvert the discourses of capitalist technology, this article claims that nonsignifying language in The Silence problematizes and envisions a tentative escape from the emptiness of hegemonic digital language.

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There are 25 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Modernist/Postmodernist Literature
Journal Section Research Article
Authors

Annelise Hein 0000-0001-8201-3945

Submission Date September 14, 2025
Acceptance Date December 16, 2025
Publication Date January 26, 2026
Published in Issue Year 2026 Issue: 5

Cite

MLA Hein, Annelise. “Babbling As Resistance in Don DeLillo’s The Silence”. Overtones Ege Journal of English Studies, no. 5, 2026, pp. 75-85.