Unerhört? Prisoner Narratives as Unlistened-to Stories (and Some Reflections on the Picaresque)

This article asks how life narratives told by marginalized people get heard (or not), with reference to prison writing from East Germany and the Federal Republic. Without claiming that captivity is the same in all places, times, and political situtations, I borrow Primo Levi's articulation of a...

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Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies. - Modern Humanities Research Association, 2009. - 112(2017), 2, Seite 440-458
Format: Article en ligne
Publié: 2017
Accès à la collection:The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies
Sujets:Social sciences Law Political science Arts Biological sciences
Description
Résumé:This article asks how life narratives told by marginalized people get heard (or not), with reference to prison writing from East Germany and the Federal Republic. Without claiming that captivity is the same in all places, times, and political situtations, I borrow Primo Levi's articulation of a narrative problem—the ‘unlistened-to story’—to explore what makes a story worth listening to, and why some stories get heard whereas others are inaudible. Because stories of literary picaros overlap in content and structure with prisoner life stories, I reflect on what the picaresque might tell us about the cultural conditions of audibility.
ISSN:22224297
DOI:10.5699/modelangrevi.112.2.0440