Merging the Human and the Nonhuman: The Object Narrator in The Adventures of a Black Coat
Merging the Human and the Nonhuman: The Object Narrator in The Adventures of a Black Coat
Author(s): Dragoş IvanaSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Comparative Study of Literature
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai
Keywords: object narrative; epistemological problems; material culture; commodity fetishism; satire;
Summary/Abstract: Rooted in the tradition of eighteenth-century circulation novels recounted by an object narrator, The Adventures of a Black Coat (1760) epitomizes the features of this experimental novelistic subgenre by foregrounding a coat which, acting as a homodiegetic narrator, lambastes the world of commodities prompted by the rise of early capitalism. As an object endowed with moral conscience, the coat epistemologically proves to be a reliable narrator that is able to render authentic experience and feelings by getting empirically involved in the world it describes. Worn by a few owners, the coat becomes a sharp observer of society and, most importantly, it foreshadows what Karl Marx has termed “commodity fetishism.” According to Marx, commodities and humans become part of a process that is economically endorsed by exchange. Read in this light, I argue that the text reveals the Marxist process of reification whereby social relations between humans turn into social relations between things. Despite being an object narrator, the coat fulfils a typically eighteenth-century pedagogical function, in that it warns the reader against the degrading morals of a society addicted to material culture.
Journal: Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory
- Issue Year: 7/2021
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 148-159
- Page Count: 12
- Language: English