Abstract
This essay offers a critique of the concept of containing or coping with contingency (Kontingenzbewältigung) put forward by a group of German philosophers and intellectuals throughout the 1980s and 1990s. This group put an emphasis on literature, especially story-telling, for thinking about contingency as a characteristic dilemma of modernity. In contrast to their anthropological perspective, I claim not only that different literary genres, periods, and even individual works and readings perform different coping practices in a historically and aesthetically specific manner, but also that literature primarily serves as a means for reflecting on the enactment of a wide variety of coping practices. I demonstrate my theses with three short literary examples (Voltaire, Sartre, contemporary zombie fiction).
Original language | English |
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Journal | Textual Practice |
Volume | 32 |
Issue number | 3 |
Pages (from-to) | 381-401 |
Number of pages | 21 |
ISSN | 0950-236X |
Publication status | Published - 16 Mar 2018 |