DIRT AND PEOPLE. THE HUMAN SUBJECT AND ITS WASTE AS PART OF NETWORKS OF DISTRIBUTED AGENTS IN CHRISTOPH RANSMAYR’S “MORBUS KITAHARA” AND KAREN DUVE’S “REGENROMAN Cover Image

DRECK UND MENSCHEN. DAS MENSCHLICHE SUBJEKT UND SEIN ABFALL ALS TEIL VON NETZWERKEN VERTEILTER HANDLUNGSTRÄGER IN CHRISTOPH RANSMAYRS „MORBUS KITAHARA“ UND KAREN DUVES „REGENROMAN“
DIRT AND PEOPLE. THE HUMAN SUBJECT AND ITS WASTE AS PART OF NETWORKS OF DISTRIBUTED AGENTS IN CHRISTOPH RANSMAYR’S “MORBUS KITAHARA” AND KAREN DUVE’S “REGENROMAN

Author(s): Hanne Janssens
Subject(s): Comparative Study of Literature, Austrian Literature, German Literature, Theory of Literature
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: material ecocriticism; German contemporary literature; Christoph Ransmayr; Karen Duve; dirt theory;

Summary/Abstract: Using insights from the field of material ecocriticism, this article examines how human subjects in Christoph Ransmayr’s Morbus Kitahara and Karen Duve’s Regenroman, relate to their dynamic material environment. The literary imagination allows us to acknowledge the interconnectedness of humans, waste and nature by revealing the human subject as part of networks of distributed agents. Traditionally, man’s supposed superiority was achieved through dualisms: cultural activities were assigned to the realm of the active, while the material environment was considered to be passive. In both novels, intermediate characters are introduced who escape these dualisms and, by doing so, illustrate the interconnectedness with their environment. Furthermore, dualistic thinking is also destabilized by drawing attention to the materiality of the human body itself.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 42
  • Page Range: 143-160
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: German