Subject or Object? The Anti-Hero of the Allegory and the Hero of the Anti-Allegory
Subject or Object? The Anti-Hero of the Allegory and the Hero of the Anti-Allegory
Author(s): Dana PercecSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Comparative Study of Literature, British Literature
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai
Keywords: allegory; BrexLit; embodied memory; objectification; satire; unreliable rememberer;
Summary/Abstract: Referring to the British writers’ prompt reaction to the Brexit crisis, in developing what has already come to be known as BrexLit, Robert Eaglestone remarks the “cultural and emotional landscapes” created by such literary responses, which attempt to “humanize” major political dilemmas. Ali Smith, commenting on the same speed of writing books “pressed against the contemporaneous,” considers this as the result of history repeating itself with us failing to be aware of it, evidence of what we might call a community of unreliable remembers. The paper focuses on Ian McEwan’s 2019 The Cockroach, a novella offering a reversed Kafkaesque metamorphosis, a pretext to satirize Brexit and to meditate on how the antiheroic character caught in this allegorical transformation devolves from subject into object. I argue that this process of objectification (using Martha Nussbaum’s concept, derived from, but not limited to the feminist critique) contributes to the disembodiment and further relativization of memory.
Journal: Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory
- Issue Year: 7/2021
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 177-189
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English