Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.31820/f.32.1.12
Politics of literature in the novel Totenwande by Daša Drndić
Iva Kosmos
orcid.org/0000-0002-9655-7000
; ZRC SAZU
Abstract
Daša Drndić’s novels, in particular Totenwande, are analysed as political literature according to the definition of politics by Rancière. He defines politics of literature as the autonomous distribution of the sensible, meaning a new mode of sense perception: “a distribution of spaces, times, and forms of activity that determines the very manner in which something in common lends itself to participation and in what way various individuals have a part in this distribution” (2013, 7). In her novels Drndić comments on historical and current events, but the politics of her literature are not found on the level of statements, but in the usage of narrative conventions in the construction of past experience and usage of documentary, historical and literary sources. Drndić breaks the conventions of narrative construction of the past defined by historiography, which is based on a narrative mode of realism and defines the past as a teleological sequence with characteristics of continuity, depersonalization, event coherence, and narrative totality. Drndić insists on radical personalization and individualization of history, abandoning chronology and incorporating the logic of cyclicality and simultaneity of time(s). By re-establishing points of continuity and discontinuity she also breaks the coherence and wholeness of authoritative historical narrative. Literary and historical sources are treated as textual constructions, emphasizing that the reality of the past is accessible only through texts created under certain narrative conventions. In this way, Drndić radically reshapes the established perception of the past as constructed by historiography and other texts in the mode of realism.
Keywords
politics of literature; Jacques Rancière; documentarity; historiography; collective memory; Daša Drndić
Hrčak ID:
239401
URI
Publication date:
25.6.2020.
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