TY - JOUR
T1 - Privileged, Hypocritical, and Complicit
T2 - Contemporary Scandinavian Literature and the Egalitarian Imagination
AU - Sharma, Devika
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Everyone knows what the predicament of privilege is: It is the awkward yet highly ordinary experience of one's privilege being a problem. I take the predicament of privilege to be a sensibility and an aesthetic that is central- but not exclusive-to contemporary Scandinavian culture. In this article, I examine one literary form taken by this predicament, which I call -hypocrisy literature." In Scandinavian hypocrisy literature, we meet a globally privileged subject that has come to identify itself as a global problem. According to this literature, the experience that turns one into a self-professed hypocrite is not the acknowledgment of one's own insincerity. Instead, it is the acknowledgment that sincerity will not save one from complicity. As I interpret it, hypocrisy literature is an aesthetic response to a specific historical situation in which the Nordic middle classes suspect that they live at the expense of others. But it is also a response, I suggest, to a development in collective ideas about what can constitute critique at all. That is one way to read hypocrisy literature: as a contemplation of what critique under conditions of complicity may or may not look like.
AB - Everyone knows what the predicament of privilege is: It is the awkward yet highly ordinary experience of one's privilege being a problem. I take the predicament of privilege to be a sensibility and an aesthetic that is central- but not exclusive-to contemporary Scandinavian culture. In this article, I examine one literary form taken by this predicament, which I call -hypocrisy literature." In Scandinavian hypocrisy literature, we meet a globally privileged subject that has come to identify itself as a global problem. According to this literature, the experience that turns one into a self-professed hypocrite is not the acknowledgment of one's own insincerity. Instead, it is the acknowledgment that sincerity will not save one from complicity. As I interpret it, hypocrisy literature is an aesthetic response to a specific historical situation in which the Nordic middle classes suspect that they live at the expense of others. But it is also a response, I suggest, to a development in collective ideas about what can constitute critique at all. That is one way to read hypocrisy literature: as a contemplation of what critique under conditions of complicity may or may not look like.
UR - http://muse.jhu.edu/article/742050
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0010-4132
VL - 56
SP - 711
EP - 730
JO - Comparative Literature Studies
JF - Comparative Literature Studies
IS - 4
ER -