Article(electronic)July 8, 2021

The Emergence of Violence and the Terror of Being Born in Murakami's Coin Locker Babies

In: Metacritic journal for comparative studies and theory: mj, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 261-274

Checking availability at your location

Abstract

Modern poetics imposed the image of Nietzsche's split Subject, with the disaggregated self-emerging as dilemmatic subjectivity and its aesthetic culmination in the "dehumanisation of art." Nietzsche's philosophy provided postmodern poetics with the Subject as "fiction," subjected to a complex process of self-multiplication and self-reflection (Ihab Hassan). The loss of the autonomy of the Subject as a "fashionable theme" (Frederic Jameson), combined with its multiplication into simulacra (Jean Baudrillard) and the abolition of reference, allow the Object to storm the places of its absence. The multiplicitous nature under which the image of subjectivity is formed is a possible solution for the issue of the Subject. Another solution would be inflicting violence upon the Subject, replaced by the corporeality of the Object, by the body, to the point of its destruction, or to the ultimate point of abjectness. My essay will use Murakami Ryū's novel Coin Locker Babies to examine its author's views on the Object-Subject relation, on the Subject as an Object (corporeality) and on the forms through which the Object inflicts violence upon the Subject.

Publisher

Babes-Bolyai University

ISSN: 2457-8827

DOI

10.24193/mjcst.2021.11.16

Report Issue

If you have problems with the access to a found title, you can use this form to contact us. You can also use this form to write to us if you have noticed any errors in the title display.