Travelers, Transcultural Identities and Identitarian Reconstruction in Mircea Nedelciu’s Fiction
Travelers, Transcultural Identities and Identitarian Reconstruction in Mircea Nedelciu’s Fiction
Author(s): Ramona HărşanSubject(s): Studies of Literature, Comparative Study of Literature, Romanian Literature
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai
Keywords: moral identity;counterculture;the sixties;Romanian communism;ethics of reconnaissance
Summary/Abstract: Having as a theoretical premise the idea that “essential personal identities” do not always synchronise with the essential identity of the group they are supposed to belong to, and that this de-synchronisation can have an ethical opposition at its core, the paper focuses on the way in which Mircea Nedelciu’s typical protagonists – nomads, socially marginal individuals with confusing, “unaccomplished identities” – attempt to (culturally and morally) reconstruct their damaged personal identities by disengaging from their social and spatial appurtenance to the national macrogroup (dominated by the moral values, identity models and cultural stereotypes imposed by Ceauşescu’s regime) and phantasmatically “relocating” their identities in the Western Counterculture of “the Sixties”. This implicit refusal to belong can ultimately be read as an “ethics of reconnaissance”, an anti-totalitarian counter-politics or negative politics of identity led by persons or small groups that thus become a (fictionally) “significant minority”.
Journal: Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory
- Issue Year: 3/2017
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 133-151
- Page Count: 19
- Language: English