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History, fiction, and the avant-garde: narrativisation and the event

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 21:57 authored by Richard Murphy
According to theorists such as Jameson and Hayden White, narrativisation has traditionally functioned as a way of endowing events with coherence, meaning and a sense of the real. This article argues that a defining feature of the modernist avant-garde and of its experiments with montage, linearity and causality is that it undermines narrativisation and consequently produces instead the opposite effect, namely "de-realisation". In contemporary culture many progressive texts have continued to attack narrativisation: firstly through various fragmented, metaleptic or wildly proliferating narrative forms (e.g. circular, or forking-path tales); but secondly through those strategies (associated with historiographic metafiction, montage or documentary) which deliberately unsettle the audience by blurring the boundary between history and fiction. Consequently links to the modernist avant-garde's critique of narrativisation can still be seen in those contemporary works (for example by Kluge, Sebald or Kieslowski) which force the audience to rethink the historiographical and narratological premises for making meaning

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Phrasis: Studies in Language and Literature

Publisher

Academia Press

Issue

1

Volume

48

Page range

83-103

Pages

0.0

Department affiliated with

  • English Publications

Notes

'The Annual Lecture on the Avant-Garde' (invited talk given at University of Ghent in November 2005)

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2013-02-11

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