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Forhandlinger om verdighet i Hamsuns Sult
Karlstad University, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (starting 2013), Department of Language, Literature and Intercultural Studies (from 2013).
2019 (Norwegian)In: Norsk litteraturvitenskapelig tidsskrift, ISSN 0809-2044, E-ISSN 1504-288X, Vol. 22, no 1, p. 7-31Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

In this article, the religious narrative of the Fall charging Hamsun’s Hunger (1890) is related to the motive of creatureliness that figures in the thinking of Walter Benjamin – as an ongoing subjection under the transformations of sovereign power in modernity. In comparison with Rainer Maria Rilke’s The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge (1910), it becomes clear that the motive of kenosis – God making himself the likeness of a servant – does not surface on the level of the fable in Hunger the way it does in Rilke. Whereas on the one hand Rilke’s Malte recognizes God in the figure of the stooping, blind newspaper vendor, on the other hand the protagonist in Hunger, desperately fighting to separate himself from fallen creation, finds himself animated by an urge to punish the correspondingly crippled character in the novel. Nevertheless, the article traces a kenotic or “self-emptying” movement even in Hunger, albeit on a performative level: As the negotiations on dignity are played out ad absurdum, the arbitrariness of sovereign power’s exclusion of “unworthy” life is displayed, thus being emptied out or deactivated in a comic register.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Universitetsforlaget, 2019. Vol. 22, no 1, p. 7-31
Keywords [en]
Hamsun, Benjamin, Rilke, Creatureliness, Profanation
National Category
Languages and Literature
Research subject
Comparative Literature
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-77445DOI: 10.18261/issn.1504-288X-2019-01-02OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kau-77445DiVA, id: diva2:1422057
Available from: 2020-04-06 Created: 2020-04-06 Last updated: 2020-04-08Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Be for meg også: Om forkrøpling og lengsel etter forløsning i moderne litteratur og poetikk
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Be for meg også: Om forkrøpling og lengsel etter forløsning i moderne litteratur og poetikk
2020 (Norwegian)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Alternative title[en]
Pray for me too : On creaturerliness and messianic longing in modern literature and poetics
Abstract [en]

This thesis is concerned with the ways in which the biblical narrative of the Fall, and more specifically the predicament of creatureliness (connoting innocence as well as depravation), can be traced as a cryptotheological motif within widely dissimilar modernist poetics and literary strategies. Postsecular theory and the return to the apostle Paul in recent political theology provide the backdrop for the seemingly disparate approaches of my case studies. Their common theme may be spelled out as the “groaning of creation” and its call for possibly redemptive responses of literature and language. In the first case study, I argue that the postwar poet Paul Celan, influenced as he may be by the condemnation of informational, “fallen” language in the thinking of Martin Heidegger and Walter Benjamin, reformulates the task of the poet into one of witnessing from within fallen language on behalf of fallen creatures. In the second case study, I compare two novels by the contemporary Norwegian authors Hanne Ørstavik and Kristine Næss, both of them dealing with a crisis of authorial legitimacy. Applying a psychoanalytic perspective, I suggest that whereas Ørstavik’s protagonist seems to suffer from a rigid fixation with a certain calling as mediated by the “paternal function”, Næss’ protagonist suffers from the lack of any such call. In the third case study, I discuss how the spirit of revenge animating the protagonist of Knut Hamsun’s debut novel Hunger (1890), is performatively deactivated. Through a complex series of negotiations on dignity, the sovereign power over “bare life” is transposed into a comic register. The notion of deactivation also plays a decisive role in Giorgio Agamben’s interpretation of Pauline messianism. In the fourth case study, I compare Agamben’s reading of Paul’s “now-time” with the Swedish author Lars Ahlin’s take on the same motif. I argue that while Agamben envisions the messianic calling simply as a deactivation of every calling, Ahlin inscribes it into the ethical relation to the neighbor. Following Walter Benjamin, this thesis outlines two distinct though interconnected visions of redemption: “profanation” on the one hand, releasing the creature from “mythical guilt”, manifested on various levels as the compulsion to repeat; and “remembrance” on the other hand, manifested as a receptivity for the unfinished, failed and thwarted in collective or personal history, demanding correction and fulfillment.

Abstract [no]

Skapningens sukk og klage. Denne avhandlingen undersøker litterære og språkfilosofiske gestaltninger av dette motivet, som hører hjemme i et bibelsk narrativ om skapelse og fall; kall og forkrøpling. Det «kreaturlige» konnoterer uskyld så vel som fordervelse, innskrevet som det er med et før og et etter, åpenbart og skjult, men også med en messiansk intensitet, en lengsel etter forløsning. Med støtte i Walter Benjamins tenkning skisseres to estetiske redningsmotiver. Profanering: en avspenning av straff og ressentimentstrukturer som pålegger skapningen «mytisk skyld». Erindring: en reseptivitet for det uferdige og forstummede i den personlige eller kollektive historien. Hos samtlige forfattere som inngår i avhandlingens undersøkelse, Paul Celan, Hanne Ørstavik, Kristine Næss, Knut Hamsun, Rainer Maria Rilke og Lars Ahlin, framleses en poetikk som handler om å vitne for falne og forkrøplede skapninger.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Karlstads universitet, 2020. p. 48
Series
Karlstad University Studies, ISSN 1403-8099 ; 2020:17
Keywords
Hamsun, Celan, Benjamin, Agamben, Ørstavik, Næss, Ahlin, creatureliness, remembrance, profanation, messianism, political theology, postsecularism, the Fall, Hamsun, Celan, Benjamin, Agamben, Ørstavik, Næss, Ahlin, creatureliness, remembrance, profanering, messianisme, politisk teologi, postsekulær teori, syndefall
National Category
Languages and Literature
Research subject
Comparative Literature
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-77452 (URN)978-91-7867-111-3 (ISBN)978-91-7867-116-8 (ISBN)
Public defence
2020-05-29, Fryxellsalen 1B 306, Karlstads Universitet, 13:00 (Norwegian)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2020-05-06 Created: 2020-04-07 Last updated: 2020-05-06Bibliographically approved

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Lovaas, Kari

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