Here are some examples of stylistic techniques that are often used in postmodern literature:
• Pastiche: The taking of various ideas from previous writings and literary styles and pasting them together to make new styles.
• Parody: Mimicking the style of another work, artist, or genre in an exaggerated way, usually for comic effect
• Intertextuality: The acknowledgment of previous literary works within another literary work.
• Metafiction: The act of writing about writing or making readers aware of the fictional nature of the very fiction they're reading.
• Temporal Distortion: The use of non-linear timelines and narrative techniques in a story.
• Minimalism: The use of characters and events which are decidedly common and non-exceptional characters.
• Maximalism: Disorganized, lengthy, highly detailed writing.
• Magical Realism: The introduction of impossible or unrealistic events into a narrative that is otherwise realistic.
• Faction: The mixing of actual historical events with fictional events without clearly defining what is factual and what is fictional.
• Reader Involvement: Often through direct address to the reader and the open acknowledgment of the fictional nature of the events being described.