A daring new view of Sebald’s works and the reading practice they call forth.
W. G. Sebald was born in 1944 in Germany. He found his way as a young academic to England and a career as professor of German. Only between the late 1980s and his untimely death in 2001 did he concentrate on nonacademic writing, crafting a new kind of prose work that shares features with but remains distinct from the novel, essay, travel writing, and memoir forms and gaining elevation to the first rank of writers internationally. No less a critic than Susan Sontag was moved to ask ‘Is literary greatness still possible?, ‘ implying that it was and that she had found it embodied in his writing. Deane Blackler explores Sebald’s biography before analyzing the reading practice his textscall forth: that of a ‘disobedient reader, ‘ a proactive reader challenged to question the text by Sebald’s peculiar use of poetic language, the pseudoautobiographical voice of his narrators, the seemingly documentary photographs he inserted into his books, and by his exquisite representations of place. Blackler reads Sebald’s fiction as adventurous and disobedient in its formulation, an imaginative revitalization of literary fiction for the third millennium.
Deane Blackler received her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature in 2005 from the University of Tasmania.
Daftar Isi
Introduction: A Pre-amble
Encounter with Disobedience
From W to the Norwich-London Road
Views from a ‘Coign of Vantage’
Stage 1: The Traveling Narrator and His Disobedient Companion
Stage 2: Traveling with a Cheap Camera — Imagine That!
Stage 3: Spatial Trajectories — Catching Trains of Thought to Textual Spaces
Conclusion: A Farewell Note
Works Cited
Index