TY - JOUR
T1 - Metaffective fiction
T2 - Structuring feeling in post-postmodern american literature
AU - Clare, Ralph
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2019/2/7
Y1 - 2019/2/7
N2 - This essay will suggest that post-postmodern literature does not simply ‘return to affect’ but that it simultaneously reflects upon the limitations and construction of affect in ways that recall postmodernism’s penchant for metafiction and self-conscious textuality. Such writing might fittingly be called ‘metaffective fiction.’ After a brief summary of Affect Theory as it pertains to contemporary literature, this essay offers as its case study a reading of J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst’s post-postmodern S. against Nabokov’s classic postmodern text Pale Fire. My contention is that if metafiction breaks the frame of narrative in order to call attention to its fictive status, metaffective fiction breaks that frame so as to interrogate self-consciously the construction of emotion and affect. Where metafiction underscores the ways in which reality is framed and constructed through narrative, metaffective fiction highlights how emotion and affect themselves are realised and ‘framed’ or codified. And while metaffective fiction realises that fictionalised emotions aren’t real emotions and that affect can never be fully accessible in language, it still both expresses emotion and realises the insufficiencies of that expression. These metaffective fictions attempt to do so as a way of renewing the potential of affect in a neoliberal age that is increasingly commodifying affective labour, leisure, and our everyday emotional lives.
AB - This essay will suggest that post-postmodern literature does not simply ‘return to affect’ but that it simultaneously reflects upon the limitations and construction of affect in ways that recall postmodernism’s penchant for metafiction and self-conscious textuality. Such writing might fittingly be called ‘metaffective fiction.’ After a brief summary of Affect Theory as it pertains to contemporary literature, this essay offers as its case study a reading of J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst’s post-postmodern S. against Nabokov’s classic postmodern text Pale Fire. My contention is that if metafiction breaks the frame of narrative in order to call attention to its fictive status, metaffective fiction breaks that frame so as to interrogate self-consciously the construction of emotion and affect. Where metafiction underscores the ways in which reality is framed and constructed through narrative, metaffective fiction highlights how emotion and affect themselves are realised and ‘framed’ or codified. And while metaffective fiction realises that fictionalised emotions aren’t real emotions and that affect can never be fully accessible in language, it still both expresses emotion and realises the insufficiencies of that expression. These metaffective fictions attempt to do so as a way of renewing the potential of affect in a neoliberal age that is increasingly commodifying affective labour, leisure, and our everyday emotional lives.
KW - Affect
KW - Neoliberalism
KW - Post-postmodern literature
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85054815703&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/0950236X.2018.1509269
DO - 10.1080/0950236X.2018.1509269
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85054815703
SN - 0950-236X
VL - 33
SP - 263
EP - 279
JO - Textual Practice
JF - Textual Practice
IS - 2
ER -