Narcissus taking a selfie – post-socialist literary representations of “whiteness” in the Balkans
Narcissus taking a selfie – post-socialist literary representations of “whiteness” in the Balkans
Author(s): Mirna Radin-SabadošSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Serbian Literature
Published by: Ústav svetovej literatúry, Slovenská akadémia vied
Keywords: "Whiteness"; "Serbian literature"; "Post-Yugoslav literature"; "Travel writing";
Summary/Abstract: The novel Dangete, duša koja se smeje (Dangete, the smiling soul, 2011) by Tijana Ašić is partially an autobiographical story presented as an encounter with East-African cultural norm. On the other hand, the novel Tai (Thai, 2013) by Goran Gocić is set in Thailand and presented as a story, or rather as a project, “of a self-aware man […] who seeks to protect a woman”, but also “as a lesson given to a complacent Westerner, with the intention of curing his haughty ego by succumbing to the East”. Both novels correspond to the formal features of travel narratives, and their common point of reference is the paralyzing fixation on the images their protagonists are pressured to negotiate with – those of the South Eastern Europe caught between dichotomy of the Occident and the Orient.
Journal: World Literature Studies
- Issue Year: 11/2019
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 97-110
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English