The European Dimension of Paul Auster’s Verbal and Visual Worlds
Abstract
Auster’s work is predominantly set in urban America and his characters rarely travel beyond the US. Even so, in the critical reception the body of Auster’s poetry and prose is widely accepted as a belonging to a distinctly European mode of writing. This is due, in part, to the subcurrent of French thought that informs the majority of the novels via such key influences as Sartre, Blanchot, Merleau-Ponty, Ponge and even Derrida, and the pivotal significance for instance of Chateaubriand’s Memoire d’Autre Tombe in Auster’s The Book of Illusions, Appollonaire’s “La Jolie Rousse” in Auster’s 4 3 2 1, Beckett’s Waiting for Godotin Auster’s City of Glass, Thomas Mann and Kafka’s short stories in Auster’s Timbuktu and Ghosts respectively. There are also important Scandinavian influences in Auster’s work most notably Hamsun but also Kai Munk and Dreyer and Henning Carlsen (for film). At the same time, eight of Auster’s novels have been published in translation to one or more European languages prior to the American original. This workshop will explore the extent and impact of the European sources in Auster’s verbal and visual worlds, probe the reception of his work in France, the UK, Spain and Scandinavia and examine the validity of such claims as “Auster is an American entirely oriented towards Europe.” (Bruckner in Barone 1995) What exactly does it mean when critics like McKean insist that “Auster belongs decidedly to the European philosophical tradition”? (2010) How are we to understand the fact that the reception of Auster’s work would seem to be more enthusiastic in certain European countries than in the US?
Priyanka Deshmukh, Adjunct Lecturer (Sorbonne Nouvelle University, France)
Jesús Ángel González, Associate Professor of English (University of Cantabria, Spain)
Francois Hugonnier, Associate Professor of American Literature (University of Angers, France)
Bo Green Jensen, writer
James Peacock, senior lecturer in American Studies (Keele Universiy, UK)
Aliki Varvogli, Senior Lecturer in English (University of Dundee, UK)
14 October
13:15 | I.B. Siegumfeldt (University of Copenhagen) | Welcome |
13:45 | Bo Green Jensen (writer) | |
14:30 | Priyanka Deshmukh (Sorbonne Nouvelle University, France) | Rewriting European Thought in Paul Auster’s The Invention of Solitude |
15:15 | Break | |
15:45-17:00 | Moderator: NN (University of Copenhagen) |
Panel discussion |
15 October
10:15 | Jesús Ángel González (University of Cantabria, Spain) | Cervantes and Auster: Specular Games in Auster’s Verbal and Visual Worlds |
10:45 | Aliki Varvogli (University of Dundee, UK) | Il est un autre: American and European selves in Paul Auster's Fiction |
11:30 | Francois Hugonnier (University of Angers, France) | From chambre de bonne to Médaille Grand Vermeil: The French background and reception of Paul Auster's work |
12:15 | James Peacock (Keele Universiy, UK) | Paul Auster, Leo and Karl Marx: Transatlantic Perspectives |
13:00 | Lunch | |
13:45-15:00 | Moderator: Martyn Bone (University of Copenhagen) | Panel discussion |
Registration no later than 20 September 2021 to Inge Birgitte Siegumfeldt.
The Event is funded by Centre for Modern European Studies (CEMES) at University of Copenhagen.
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