Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The Roar of the Minotaur

2020; Duke University Press; Volume: 47; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1215/01903659-8524408

ISSN

1527-2141

Autores

Stuart Burrows,

Tópico(s)

Memory, Trauma, and Testimony

Resumo

This essay proposes that W. G. Sebald’s distinctive contribution to the global novel is his reordering of the space of representation. This reordering is both literal and metaphorical. It is literal, in the sense that Sebald sets his work within actual spaces: the pages upon which his novels are written as much as the landscape being traversed by his narrator. It is metaphorical, in the sense that Sebald explores a set of imaginary spaces nested within each other: those occupied by his characters, who inhabit several worlds simultaneously, and that allocated to the narrative voice, which speaks to us out of a clearly demarcated yet unlocatable place. The result is not a troubling of the boundary between the real and the fictional, as many of his critics have contended, but a reflection on how the past continues to shape the present, forming the real and imaginative coordinates of our world.

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