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The aesthetic phenomenon of the uncanny in literature and art is a spatial and gendered aesthetic concept, which is expressed in the spatial characteristics of a literary or photographic narrative. The intention of this thesis is to evaluate the entanglement of the uncanny, space, domesticity and femininity in the context of Gothic literature and photography. These four objects can only be read in their interplay with each other and how they each function as structural principles in the framework of Gothic fiction and photography. The literary texts, Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wall-Paper” (1892) and Shirley Jackson’s “The Lovely House” (1950) and The Haunting of Hill House (1959) as well as Francesca Woodman’s self-portraits that will be discussed further share one particular quality; they use the haunted house motif to express the protagonist’s psychological state by transferring mental hauntings onto the narrative’s spatial layer. The establishment of a connection between the concepts at hand, the uncanny, domesticity, spatiality and femininity, is the basis for the first half of the thesis. What follows is an overview of how domestic politics and gendered perceptions of and behaviors in spaces are expressed in the Gothic mode in particular. In the literary analysis two ways in which the Freudian uncanny constitutes itself in the haunted house narrative, first the house as the site of repetition and second the house as a stand-in for the maternal body, are examined. Drawing from Gernot Böhme’s and Martina Löw’s theoretic work on space and atmosphere the thesis focuses on the different aesthetic strategies that produce the uncanny atmosphere associated with the Gothic haunted house. The female subjects at the narratives’ center are in the ambiguous process of disappearing or becoming, this (dis)appearing act is facilitated by their haunted surroundings. In the case of the unnamed narrator in “Wall-Paper” her suppressed rage at her husband is mirrored in the strangled woman trapped inside the yellow wallpaper. Once she recognizes her doppelganger the union of her two selves takes place in the short story’s dramatic climax. In Shirley Jackson’s literary works the haunted houses, protagonists in themselves, entrap, transform, and ultimately devour their female daughter-victims. The haunted houses are symbols, means and places of the continuous tradition of female entrapment within the domestic sphere, be it as wives, mothers or daughters. In Francesca Woodman’s self-portraits the themes of creation/destruction and becoming/disappearing within the ruinous (post)domestic sphere are acted out by the fragmented and blurry female figure who intriguingly oscillates between self-empowerment and submission to destruction.
In this cartography, I examine M.K. Gandhi’s practice of fasting for political purposes from a specifically aesthetic perspective. In other words, to foreground their dramatic qualities, how they in their expressive repetition, patterning and stylization produced a/effected heightened forms of emotions. To carry out this task, I follow the theater scholar Erika Fischer-Lichte’s features that give name to her book Äesthetik des Performativen (2004). The cartography is framed in a philosophical presentation of Gandhi’s discourse as well as of his historical sources. Moreover, as a second frame, I historicize the fasts, by means of a typology and teleology in context.
The historically and discoursively framed cartography maps four main dimensions that define the aesthetics of the performative: mediality, materiality, semioticity and aestheticity. The first part analyses the medial platforms in which the fasts as events have been historically recorded and in which they have left their traces and inscriptions. These historical sources are namely, newspapers, images, newsreels and a documentary film. Secondly, the material dimension depicts Gandhi’s corporeal condition, as well as the spatiality and temporality of the fasts. In the third place, I revise and reformulate critically Fischer-Lichte’s concepts of “presence” and “representation” with resonating concepts of G. C. Spivak and J. Rancière. This revision illustrates Gandhi’s fasts and shows the process of how an individual may become the embodiment or representation of a national body-politic. The last chapter of the cartography explores the autopoetic-feedback loop between Gandhi and the people and finishes with a comparison of the mise en scène of the hunger artists with the fasts of the Indian the politician, social reformer, and theologian. The text concludes interpreting Gandhi’s practice of fasting under the light of the concepts of “intellectual emancipation” and “de-subjectivation” of the philosopher J. Rancière.
The four main concerns of this cartography are: Firstly, in the field of Gandhi’s reception, to explore the aesthetic dimension as both alternative and complementary to the two hegemonic interpretative lenses, i.e. a hagiographic or a secular political understanding of the fasts. From a theoretical perspective, the cartography pursues to be a transdisciplinary experiment that aims at deploying concepts that have been traditionally developed, derived from and used in the field of the arts (theater, film, literature, aesthetic performance, etc.) in the field of the political. In brief, inverting an expression of Rancière, to understand politics as aesthetics. Thirdly, from a thematic point of view, the cartography inquires the historical forms of staging and perception of hunger. Last yet importantly, it is an inquiry of the practice of fasting as nonviolence, what Gandhi, its most sophisticated modern theoretician and practitioner considered its most radical expression.
Die Arbeit geht aus von der Annahme, dass Literatur und Malerei, obgleich sie ihren Darstellungsformen entsprechend unterschiedliche Werkzeuge oder Strategien nutzen, ähnliche Potentiale der Gedächtnisreflexion für den Rezipienten bereitstellen. Selbst wenn die Strategien zur Erlangung eines Potentials der Reflexion von Gedächtnis also an die jeweilige Disziplin gebunden sind, so können doch die reflektierten Aspekte ähnliche sein. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, zu zeigen, dass in Theorie und Praxis solche Überschneidungen auffindbar sind. Dabei sollen Literatur und bildende Kunst (hier: Malerei) als zwei von vielen möglichen Erinnerungsmedien und ihre Funktionen innerhalb eines kollektiven Gedächtnisses als solche dargestellt werden. Speziell befasst sich die Arbeit dann mit der Funktion der Reflexion des kollektiven Erinnerns als Wirkungspotential, das im Rezeptionsprozess aktualisiert werden kann. Verschiedene Strategien der Gedächtnisreflexion werden unterschieden und in den drei Anwendungsbeispielen analysiert. Die Arbeit fasst zunächst einige von den Studien Jan und Aleida Assmanns ausgehende narratologische Konzepte zur Erinnerungskultur zusammen, darunter die Ansätze von Astrid Erll und Birgit Neumann. Es kristalliert sich eine Unterscheidung von Gedächtnisbildung und Gedächtnisreflexion heraus. Genauer in den Blick genommen wird Astrid Erlls Modell einer „Rhetorik des kollektiven Gedächtnisses.“ Auf drei Textebenen, der Handlungsebene, der Textstruktur und der sprachlichen Ebene können Potentiale der Gedächtnisreflexion beschrieben werden. Anhand dieser Unterteilungen werden im Anwendungsteil dann zwei literarische Prosatexte der gegenwärtigen Erinnerungsliteratur in den Blick genommen. Beide Texte, sowohl Grass' Im Krebsgang als auch Timms Halbschatten weisen vielfältige Strategien der Gedächtnisreflexion auf, die sich aber in ihrer Schwerpunktbildung voneinander unterscheiden. Zudem wird die Methodik auf den Gemäldezyklus 18. Oktober 1977 des Malers Gerhard Richter angewandt.