TRADITION AND SUBVERSION IN IMRE KERTÉSZ’S WORK
TRADITION AND SUBVERSION IN IMRE KERTÉSZ’S WORK
Author(s): Zsuzsanna VargaSubject(s): Hungarian Literature, History of the Holocaust, History of Antisemitism, Theory of Literature
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: Fateless; The Failure; Bildungsroman; Künstlerroman; subjectivity; contingency;
Summary/Abstract: This article offers a complement to previous readings of Kertész’s Nobel-Prize winning novel Fateless and his other significant fiction The Failure. While previous critics of these key texts often read Kertész’s representation of the Holocaust experience in the context of twentieth century European history or that of his personal biography, and The Failure in the context of the author’s own experience of authorship in Hungary in the 1970s and 1980s, this essay argues for his indebtedness to the classic nineteenth century topos and genre of the Bildungsroman and to the genre of Künstlerroman. While in Fateless, the structural elements of the plot redeploy the elements of the Bildungsroman, its fundamental indebtedness to the modernist concept of the contingency of plot, action and character, and the essentially postmodernist contention about the futility of knowledge display a degree of tension in the text. The Failure also explores the well-known late-nineteenth century topos of the Künstlerroman and the representation of literary authorship. Studies about Kertész’s work, the article suggests, could be further expanded by exploring the relationship between Kertész’s work and different Hungarian literary traditions.
- Issue Year: 18/2004
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 223-234
- Page Count: 12
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF