Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Poetics after Auschwitz
- Part II Tradition and Transgression
- Part III Comparative Explorations in European Poetics
- 13 Sartre and His Literary Alter Ego Mathieu in Les Chemins de la liberté (1938–49): From the Roads to an Abstract Freedom to the Roads of Authenticity
- 14 André Malraux and Oswald Spengler: The Poetics of Metamorphosis
- 15 Freud's Brain in the Snow: Catastrophe and Creativity in the Poetics of Danilo Kiš
- 16 Claude Lanzmann's Shoah and the Aesthetics of Ohnmacht
- Works Cited
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
15 - Freud's Brain in the Snow: Catastrophe and Creativity in the Poetics of Danilo Kiš
from Part III - Comparative Explorations in European Poetics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Poetics after Auschwitz
- Part II Tradition and Transgression
- Part III Comparative Explorations in European Poetics
- 13 Sartre and His Literary Alter Ego Mathieu in Les Chemins de la liberté (1938–49): From the Roads to an Abstract Freedom to the Roads of Authenticity
- 14 André Malraux and Oswald Spengler: The Poetics of Metamorphosis
- 15 Freud's Brain in the Snow: Catastrophe and Creativity in the Poetics of Danilo Kiš
- 16 Claude Lanzmann's Shoah and the Aesthetics of Ohnmacht
- Works Cited
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
Every creative act — in art, science or religion — involves a new innocence of perception, liberated from the cataract of accepted belief.
— Arthur Koestler, The SleepwalkersIn the face of catastrophes such as the Shoah, poetry assumes the functions of memory, communication and the creation of meaning within the trauma's topographies of the “unspeakable.” It supersedes other symbolic systems that are unable to cope in such contexts. In order to shed light on the precise impact of catastrophe on literary creativity, this article looks at the post-Auschwitz poetics of Danilo Kiš (1935–89), a Yugoslav writer of Hungarian-Jewish-Montenegrin descent whose work engages in a search for new aesthetic forms of remembering the Jewish past. The following will outline the artistic techniques which Kiš applied or developed to express the Jewish experience in his writing, inscribing it into the memory of literature itself. The focus will be on two of Kiš's novels: Hourglass (Peščanik, 1972), a novel that draws a psychological “map” of a Jewish survivor of the so-called Novi Sad raid in January 1942, demonstrating just how closely imbricated catastrophe and creativity are, and A Tomb for Boris Davidovich (Grobnica za Borisa Davidoviča, 1976) which shows Kiš's work to be constructed as a “mnemo-poetic” palimpsest.
Defamiliarization — A New Way of Seeing
In Hourglass, the Jewish protagonist, Eduard Sam, only appears as the initials E.S. (an abbreviation which can, significantly, be read as Es, the Freudian Id).
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- Information
- German and European Poetics after the HolocaustCrisis and Creativity, pp. 253 - 266Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2011