Icebound Modernity: The Shipwreck as Metaphor in Dan Simmons’ The Terror
In this article, I seek to present a “metaphorology” of the shipwreck through a literary example. As Hans Blumenberg has noted, the shipwreck has served as a metaphor for the contingency of human existence in Western culture. Building on Blumenberg’s ideas, I argue that modernity heightens contingen...
Main Author: | Lovasz Adam |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Sciendo
2019-12-01
|
Series: | American, British and Canadian Studies Journal |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.2478/abcsj-2019-0020 |
Similar Items
-
SPECULATIVEPOSTHUMANISM: NATURALIZATION AND VITALIZATION
by: Nataliia V. Zahurska
Published: (2018-12-01) -
A Woman by Nature? Darren Aronofsky’s <i>mother!</i> as American Ecofeminist Gothic
by: Alexandra Hauke
Published: (2020-05-01) -
The Obstinate Real: Barad, Escobar, and Object-Oriented Ontology
by: Feichtinger Michael
Published: (2019-06-01) -
World unmaking in the fiction of Delany, VanderMeer, and Jemisin
by: Linnitt, Carol
Published: (2021) -
The Riddle of the Fowl and the Eagle
by: Alvin Yapan, translated by Christian Benitez
Published: (2019-10-01)