Beschreibung
The essay collection focuses on morbid phenomena such as melancholy, trauma, illness and death which engage with questions of «cultural vitality» and «cultural mortality». The figurations and representations of social pathologies not only display time in its existential drama, but furthermore show a paradox inherent to processes of decay: in passing lies a certain accumulation of life. Thus the morbid indicates the presence of the living, although it intentionally prefigures death. The collection points to the complex interconnections of social, medical and cultural discourses and assumes the seemingly negative of the morbid presence to be the constitutive element of the imagination and a catalyst for individual empowerment. As a source of life and art, the morbid then equally locates the point of intersection between ethics and aesthetics.
Autorenportrait
Stephanie Siewert is a PhD candidate in Comparative Literature at the University of Potsdam and a fellow of the
. She received her M.A. degree in American Studies, Comparative Literature and Educational Science. Her dissertation project focuses on carceral spaces and modalities of social visibility in literature and film of the 19th and 20th centuries. She is the co-editor of the essay collection
(2011). Her main research interests include theories of space, affect theory, ethical criticism, and cultures of/in mobility.
Antonia Mehnert is a PhD candidate at the University of Munich (American Studies Department), working on her dissertation project entitled «The Cultural Imaginary of Climate Change». She is furthermore participating in the structured doctoral program «Environment and Society» at the
. For her dissertation project she receives a scholarship from the
. She studied American Studies, Latin-American studies and Economics at the University of Potsdam and the Free University Berlin. Her research interests include ecocriticism, Chicano/a Studies, the Caribbean, transnationalism, postcolonialism.
Inhalt
Contents: Stephanie Siewert: Reflections on the Culture(s) of Morbidity or the Morbidity of Culture – Rüdiger Kunow: «People between two countries always feel sorrow»: Some Preliminary Reflections on Transnational Affects – Antonia Mehnert: « Ou libéré ? » Transnational Trauma in
by Edwidge Danticat – John Carlos Rowe: Disease, Culture, and Transnationalism in the Americas – Marc Priewe: Making Sense of Morbidity in Early American Autobiography – Ariane Schröder: ‘Descent into Hell’: The Cultural and Biomedical Signification of Depression in William Styron’s
Sandra Poppe: The Aesthetics of Death and Mourning in American Literature and Film – Frederike Offizier: Death of the Other: Dying, Alterity, and Appropriation – Stephanie Siewert: «As for France, the Nation has Disposed of You»: The Penal Colony as Morbid Space and Discourse of Life. Inhaltsverzeichnis