Strange turnings

dc.contributor.authorFebruary, Oliver
dc.date.accessioned2020-09-04T06:59:34Z
dc.date.available2020-09-04T06:59:34Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.descriptionReflective Essay and Creative Work Submitted as Part of the Master’s Degree in Creative Writing at the University of the Witwatersrand 2019 Oliver Februaryen_ZA
dc.description.abstractThis project is a set of short stories that examines a particular character type that is obsessive, anxious and feels out of place in the world. Important influences are Lydia Davis, Thomas Bernhard and W G Sebald. The primary aim was to represent and interrogate – through the minute, capillary and affective movements of power that literature represents so well – a consciousness full of resentment at being kept out of the world whose attempts at communication with others are repeatedly thwarted. As such, the most important element of the collection as a whole was the creation of an unnamed narrator who appears in every story, often in conversation with another character, but sometimes simply as a voice delivering an obsessive monologue. In the stories with an interlocutor the general structure is shaped through the disappointed contact between the narrator and the other character/s as he attempts to connect with another in conversation but feels excluded. Often the two characters are involved in a walk around the natural or urban environment. This allows both for the few examples of setting and natural detail that the deeply internal stories exhibit, and also for the homonymous analogue between the wandering of the walker/s and the wondering pattern of the narrators thought and conversations. As it developed a process emerged, one in which the writing attempted to present or enact the inarticulate by writing very precisely at a oblique angle to those feelings of vulnerability and anxious obsession that were the intended subjects but were difficult and impossible to articulate. One subject or conversation was worried at obsessively until another (the unspoken subtext of the first) became sensible through relief. In this sense the problem of thwarted connection is circumvented by the communication with the reader of deep emotion through this oblique style.en_ZA
dc.description.librarianXN2020en_ZA
dc.facultyFaculty of Humanitiesen_ZA
dc.format.extentOnline resource (117 leaves)
dc.identifier.citationFebruary, Oliver Justin. (2019). Strange turnings. University of the Witwatersrand, https://hdl.handle.net/10539/29467
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10539/29467
dc.language.isoenen_ZA
dc.schoolWits School of Artsen_ZA
dc.subject.lcshThought and thinking
dc.subject.lcshConsciousness
dc.titleStrange turningsen_ZA
dc.typeThesisen_ZA

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