Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial Self
This article analyzes Karl Ove Knausgård’s six-volume autobiography My Struggle in the frame of an emerging cross-medial aesthetics of the ‘serial self’. This aesthetics is informed by the technological potentialities of digital media, and by social media practices like taking a selfie or posting a...
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Università degli Studi di Cagliari
2016-06-01
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Online Access: | http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/2086 |
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doaj-9a88d1c87f4b4fd7804a536f6d9f04222020-11-25T01:34:19ZengUniversità degli Studi di CagliariBetween2039-65972016-06-0161110.13125/2039-6597/20861541Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial SelfInge van de Ven0Utrecht UniversityThis article analyzes Karl Ove Knausgård’s six-volume autobiography My Struggle in the frame of an emerging cross-medial aesthetics of the ‘serial self’. This aesthetics is informed by the technological potentialities of digital media, and by social media practices like taking a selfie or posting a blog every single day and accumulating these self-representations, without selection. The serial self is marked by continuity, real-time effects, open-endedness, rhythm, repetition, and a thematic attention to the mundane. It can be discerned in the daily comic strip, the daily selfie, and time-lapse cinema. The article embeds My Struggle in this larger, intermedial framework. Moreover, it refers to the work of psychologist Galen Strawson to argue that the self-representations in Knausgård’s work should be understood as episodic rather than diachronic in nature. This results in a sequential and paratactic, rather than causal and hierarchical, presentation of memorial material. It is claimed that serial self-representations of this type are increasingly central to our current media ecology. They offer a valuable medium for investigating, materializing, and mapping on the page the traces left by the passage of time, as serialization lends itself to performative and cumulative representations of a ‘self’ in flux, that dramatize and perform the struggles of the episodic personality in search for continuity.http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/2086serialitydigitalizationnovelautobiography |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Inge van de Ven |
spellingShingle |
Inge van de Ven Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial Self Between seriality digitalization novel autobiography |
author_facet |
Inge van de Ven |
author_sort |
Inge van de Ven |
title |
Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial Self |
title_short |
Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial Self |
title_full |
Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial Self |
title_fullStr |
Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial Self |
title_full_unstemmed |
Karl Ove Knausgård’s My Struggle and the Serial Self |
title_sort |
karl ove knausgård’s my struggle and the serial self |
publisher |
Università degli Studi di Cagliari |
series |
Between |
issn |
2039-6597 |
publishDate |
2016-06-01 |
description |
This article analyzes Karl Ove Knausgård’s six-volume autobiography My Struggle in the frame of an emerging cross-medial aesthetics of the ‘serial self’. This aesthetics is informed by the technological potentialities of digital media, and by social media practices like taking a selfie or posting a blog every single day and accumulating these self-representations, without selection. The serial self is marked by continuity, real-time effects, open-endedness, rhythm, repetition, and a thematic attention to the mundane. It can be discerned in the daily comic strip, the daily selfie, and time-lapse cinema. The article embeds My Struggle in this larger, intermedial framework. Moreover, it refers to the work of psychologist Galen Strawson to argue that the self-representations in Knausgård’s work should be understood as episodic rather than diachronic in nature. This results in a sequential and paratactic, rather than causal and hierarchical, presentation of memorial material. It is claimed that serial self-representations of this type are increasingly central to our current media ecology. They offer a valuable medium for investigating, materializing, and mapping on the page the traces left by the passage of time, as serialization lends itself to performative and cumulative representations of a ‘self’ in flux, that dramatize and perform the struggles of the episodic personality in search for continuity. |
topic |
seriality digitalization novel autobiography |
url |
http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/2086 |
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