A3 Refereed book chapter or chapter in a compilation book

Melancholy and the Narration of Transnational Trauma in W. G. Sebald and Teju Cole




AuthorsKaisa Kaakinen

EditorsHanna Meretoja, Colin Davis

Publication year2017

Book title Storytelling and Ethics: Literature, Visual Arts and the Power of Narrative

Series titleRoutledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature

Number in series80

First page 142

Last page158

Number of pages17

ISBN978-1-138-24406-1

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9781315265018

Web address https://www.routledge.com/Storytelling-and-Ethics-Literature-Visual-Arts-and-the-Power-of-Narrative/Meretoja-Davis/p/book/9781138244061


Abstract

Nigerian-American writer Teju Cole (b. 1975), who published his critically acclaimed novel Open City in 2011, has often been compared to the German émigré writer W. G. Sebald (1944–2001). One may indeed find certain similarities in these two authors’ prose: both authors employ associative walks of solitary narrator figures as a narrative tool to bind together disparate narrative fragments, and both authors’ works study the lingering effects of histories of violence on a transnational scale. In an essay published in the New Yorker in 2012, Teju Cole also explicitly named Sebald as his “precursor”—“The teacher I never knew, the friend I met only posthumously” (Cole 2012).



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