Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994

Lucan’s Bellum Civile can be read as an epic that functions in the mode of trauma literature, i.e. a work that explicitly seeks to represent a horror that defies its very representation. Toward this end, this article applies the lens of modern trauma studies to a comparative reading of Lucan set al...

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Main Author: Mark Allen Thorne
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Universität Potsdam 2017-04-01
Series:thersites. Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.thersites-journal.de/index.php/thr/article/view/41
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spelling doaj-cfabfa7f226542dc89535e29cf674fee2020-11-25T02:59:19ZdeuUniversität Potsdamthersites. Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date2364-76122017-04-01410.34679/thersites.vol4.41Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994Mark Allen Thorne0Brigham Young University Lucan’s Bellum Civile can be read as an epic that functions in the mode of trauma literature, i.e. a work that explicitly seeks to represent a horror that defies its very representation. Toward this end, this article applies the lens of modern trauma studies to a comparative reading of Lucan set alongside selections from two literary representations of the Rwanda genocide of 1994. By reading these ancient and modern texts alongside each other, we can gain greater insight into some of the shared rhetorical and narrative strategies that these writers from such different time periods have employed. In the face of lingering trauma, these ancient and modern strategies on one hand emphasize speechlessness (nefas and the threat of silence) and yet on the other hand engage the audience and invite them into the space of trauma through the senses of sight, sound, and emotion. The Roman poet Lucan, like his modern counterparts, seeks to guide his readers into a haunting encounter with the deeper traumatic reality of these conflicts such that they can no longer be unwitnessed or ignored. https://www.thersites-journal.de/index.php/thr/article/view/41Lucanepicnefastrauma literaturecivil warnarrator
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Allen Thorne
spellingShingle Mark Allen Thorne
Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994
thersites. Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date
Lucan
epic
nefas
trauma literature
civil war
narrator
author_facet Mark Allen Thorne
author_sort Mark Allen Thorne
title Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994
title_short Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994
title_full Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994
title_fullStr Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994
title_full_unstemmed Speaking the Unspeakable: Engaging Nefas in Lucan and Rwanda 1994
title_sort speaking the unspeakable: engaging nefas in lucan and rwanda 1994
publisher Universität Potsdam
series thersites. Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date
issn 2364-7612
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Lucan’s Bellum Civile can be read as an epic that functions in the mode of trauma literature, i.e. a work that explicitly seeks to represent a horror that defies its very representation. Toward this end, this article applies the lens of modern trauma studies to a comparative reading of Lucan set alongside selections from two literary representations of the Rwanda genocide of 1994. By reading these ancient and modern texts alongside each other, we can gain greater insight into some of the shared rhetorical and narrative strategies that these writers from such different time periods have employed. In the face of lingering trauma, these ancient and modern strategies on one hand emphasize speechlessness (nefas and the threat of silence) and yet on the other hand engage the audience and invite them into the space of trauma through the senses of sight, sound, and emotion. The Roman poet Lucan, like his modern counterparts, seeks to guide his readers into a haunting encounter with the deeper traumatic reality of these conflicts such that they can no longer be unwitnessed or ignored.
topic Lucan
epic
nefas
trauma literature
civil war
narrator
url https://www.thersites-journal.de/index.php/thr/article/view/41
work_keys_str_mv AT markallenthorne speakingtheunspeakableengagingnefasinlucanandrwanda1994
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