Atrocity and Agency: W.G. Sebald’s Traumatic Memory in the Light of Hannah Arendt’s Politics of Tragedy
Document Type
Contribution to Book
Publication Date
12-2014
Publication Title
Tragedy and the Tragic in German Literature, Art and Thought
DOI
10.7722/j.ctt7zstkf
Abstract
Relatively late in his career W. G. Sebald began attracting wide attention for his semi-autobiographical books written in a dense and digressive style and incorporating black-and-white photographs and postcard images. These images intimate some of the more profound costs of nineteenth-and twentieth-century European civilization. Evoking the aftermath of wars, genocides, and environmental devastation in such books as Vertigo,The Rings of Saturn, and The Emigrants, Sebald has attracted a growing body of scholarly criticism that tends increasingly to examine his literary engagement with traces of past suffering under the rubric of trauma.
Recommended Citation
Pirro, Robert.
2014.
"Atrocity and Agency: W.G. Sebald’s Traumatic Memory in the Light of Hannah Arendt’s Politics of Tragedy."
Tragedy and the Tragic in German Literature, Art and Thought, Stephen Dowden and Thomas Quinn (Ed.): 296-310: Camden House.
doi: 10.7722/j.ctt7zstkf
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/poli-sci-facpubs/202