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Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction

Tom McCarthy writes against a mode of humanist realism that dominates contemporary fiction, which he calls “as laden with artifice as any other literary convention” (Typewriters 59). He rejects realism's claim to “objectively reflect, capture or report on historical events and mental activity” (McCa...

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Main Author: Triebel, Yannick
Other Authors: Stables, Wayne
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of English Language and Literature 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Triebel, Yannick
author2 Stables, Wayne
author_browse Stables, Wayne
Triebel, Yannick
author_facet Stables, Wayne
Triebel, Yannick
author_sort Triebel, Yannick
collection Thesis
description Tom McCarthy writes against a mode of humanist realism that dominates contemporary fiction, which he calls “as laden with artifice as any other literary convention” (Typewriters 59). He rejects realism's claim to “objectively reflect, capture or report on historical events and mental activity” (McCarthy, Typewriters 59). This thesis explores the question of the blind spot in his work, the way in which his fiction, in contrast to this mode of realism, focuses not on content or narrative but on what cannot be represented. McCarthy's novels obsessively attempt to write the impossible—a facet of his work that critics consistently neglect. What is most compelling in literature, he maintains, is what “does not happen” (Typewriters 178). His fictional work is an endeavour to rethink the relation between literature and the event. The thesis demonstrates that McCarthy's novels C, Remainder, and Satin Island undermine realist narrative techniques by reimagining the notion of the event. In C, language is linked to death and disaster through the way in which the novel enacts language's contingency and dispersal. Remainder shows disaster, and thus trauma, as a fundamental ontological condition and marks the impossibility of any authentic event, such as death. The novel decentres the human subject and instead privileges brute materiality— much like the nouveau roman, it constitutes an “encounter with structure” (McCarthy, Typewriters 185). Matter, which the novel posits as a force of originary inauthenticity and links to disaster, is both unavoidable and impossible to understand. Satin Island, in its fragmentary meditations, approaches the question of the nature of the literary work: the work as such is always in abeyance; the novel probes the idea that literature necessarily requires reference to an unreachable outside that defines it. McCarthy's thinking of the event is read alongside thinkers such as Maurice Blanchot and Jacques Derrida. Remainder, for instance, enacts Blanchot's idea of the disaster, as well as Derridean concepts such as the trace, and the analysis of Satin Island draws on the aesthetics of Blanchot and Stéphane Mallarmé. McCarthy's fiction reveals that at the core of literature is a kind of disaster, an aesthetic and representational failure. His writings for the International Necronautical Society suggest that contending with this disaster is an aesthetic imperative: art, the group writes, is “the consequence and experience of failed transcendence” (McCarthy, Critchley et al., “Joint Statement on Inauthenticity” 223). Hence, art emerges as the remainder of catastrophe.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40538 Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction Triebel, Yannick Stables, Wayne Arts Tom McCarthy writes against a mode of humanist realism that dominates contemporary fiction, which he calls “as laden with artifice as any other literary convention” (Typewriters 59). He rejects realism's claim to “objectively reflect, capture or report on historical events and mental activity” (McCarthy, Typewriters 59). This thesis explores the question of the blind spot in his work, the way in which his fiction, in contrast to this mode of realism, focuses not on content or narrative but on what cannot be represented. McCarthy's novels obsessively attempt to write the impossible—a facet of his work that critics consistently neglect. What is most compelling in literature, he maintains, is what “does not happen” (Typewriters 178). His fictional work is an endeavour to rethink the relation between literature and the event. The thesis demonstrates that McCarthy's novels C, Remainder, and Satin Island undermine realist narrative techniques by reimagining the notion of the event. In C, language is linked to death and disaster through the way in which the novel enacts language's contingency and dispersal. Remainder shows disaster, and thus trauma, as a fundamental ontological condition and marks the impossibility of any authentic event, such as death. The novel decentres the human subject and instead privileges brute materiality— much like the nouveau roman, it constitutes an “encounter with structure” (McCarthy, Typewriters 185). Matter, which the novel posits as a force of originary inauthenticity and links to disaster, is both unavoidable and impossible to understand. Satin Island, in its fragmentary meditations, approaches the question of the nature of the literary work: the work as such is always in abeyance; the novel probes the idea that literature necessarily requires reference to an unreachable outside that defines it. McCarthy's thinking of the event is read alongside thinkers such as Maurice Blanchot and Jacques Derrida. Remainder, for instance, enacts Blanchot's idea of the disaster, as well as Derridean concepts such as the trace, and the analysis of Satin Island draws on the aesthetics of Blanchot and Stéphane Mallarmé. McCarthy's fiction reveals that at the core of literature is a kind of disaster, an aesthetic and representational failure. His writings for the International Necronautical Society suggest that contending with this disaster is an aesthetic imperative: art, the group writes, is “the consequence and experience of failed transcendence” (McCarthy, Critchley et al., “Joint Statement on Inauthenticity” 223). Hence, art emerges as the remainder of catastrophe. 2024-08-30T11:04:23Z 2024-08-30T11:04:23Z 2017 2024-08-30T11:02:11Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40538 eng application/pdf Department of English Language and Literature Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Arts
Triebel, Yannick
Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction
title_full Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction
title_fullStr Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction
title_full_unstemmed Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction
title_short Literature's Blind Spot: Event and Remainder in Tom McCarthy's Fiction
title_sort literature s blind spot event and remainder in tom mccarthy s fiction
topic Arts
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40538
work_keys_str_mv AT triebelyannick literaturesblindspoteventandremainderintommccarthysfiction