Affiliation:
1. ISNI: 0000000419368200 Dalhousie University
Abstract
Using Thing theory and a Marxist analysis of temporality, I show how identity formation in Erpenbeck’s novel relies on objects and a person’s ability to work, demonstrating how the dehumanizing effects of capitalism not only impact the asylum seekers in the novel, but its German characters as well. Although characters fight against dehumanization, Erpenbeck’s novel demonstrates that the only hope for the future lies in systemic change. Although the majority of scholarship on Go, Went, Gone reads it through the lens of Europe’s refugee crisis, I argue that Erpenbeck contextualizes the crisis, situating it in a dehumanizing capitalist system fraught with internal contradictions to show the true crisis is not an influx of migrants, but the failure of the German political and economic systems to account for them.
Funder
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council’s Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships – Doctoral scholarship
Subject
Anthropology,Cultural Studies,Demography
Reference23 articles.
1. The violence of precarity and the appeal of routine in Jenny Erpenbeck’s Gehen, Ging, Gegangen;Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies,2018
2. British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (n.d.), ‘The story of Africa: The Cold War’, BBC, https://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/specials/1624_story_of_africa/page28.shtml. Accessed 13 February 2022.
3. “Do not disturb my circles!”: Face-to-face encounters with refugees in Jenny Erpenbeck’s Go, Went, Gone and Bodo Kirchhoff’s Widerfahrnis;The European Legacy,2021
4. Why we need things,1993