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The “Black Sounds” of Ene Mihkelson’s Katkuhaud (‘Plague Grave’) and W. G. Sebald’s Austerlitz. Part I. Foundations
Author(s) -
Maire Jaanus
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
interlitteraria/interlitteraria.
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2228-4729
pISSN - 1406-0701
DOI - 10.12697/il.2016.21.2.14
Subject(s) - plague (disease) , humanism , tonality , economic justice , psychoanalysis , philosophy , art , literature , history , art history , psychology , theology , archaeology , law , musical , political science
“Foundations” is the first part of a two-part article to be published in Interlitteraria. It gives a brief account of the post-humanistic, foundationless, and traumatic world encountered in Ene Mihkelson’s Katkuhaud (‘Plague Grave’) and W. G. Sebald’s Austerlitz, and continues with more detailed elaborations of the loss of specific foundational ideals, such as their contemporary experience of the failure and limits of language, of sense-making, and memory; the haphazardness of history; the invalidity of compensatory justice, and above all the deletion of their childhood fields of joy and love or of what Panksepp calls their “affective mind.” It prepares for a fuller comparison of Mihkelson and Sebald’s tonality, and their art of valediction and memory in Part two.

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