DFGライプニッツ講演会、10月9日17:20~18:20上智大学

エアランゲン=ニュルンベルク大学 ハイケ・パウル 講演「Dissociation/Nation: Narratives of Ruin and Repair in Contemporary American Culture」

ドイツ、エアランゲン=ニュルンベルク大学のハイケ・パウル教授(Prof. Dr. Heike Paul)は2018年にドイツ研究振興協会(DFG)ゴットフリート・ヴィルヘルム・ライプニッツ賞を受賞しました。DFG日本代表部は世界的に著名なライプニッツ賞受賞者を紹介する「DFGライプニッツ講演会」定期的に開催しています。

パウル教授は北アメリカ文学やトランスカルチャー文学を含めて幅広く「アメリカ」を研究されており、今回は「Dissociation/Nation: Narratives of Ruin and Repair in Contemporary American Culture」と題し、ご講演いただきます。

講演会内容

ハイケ・パウル教授

ハイケ・パウル教授

© DFG

題目:「Dissociation/Nation: Narratives of Ruin and Repair in Contemporary American Culture」
時間:令和元年10月9日(水)17:20~18:20(17:00 受付開始)
場所
:中央図書館・総合研究棟(L号館)8階 821号室
主催
:上智大学 アメリカ・カナダ研究所、ドイツ研究振興協会(DFG)
後援:ドイツ 科学・イノベーション フォーラム(DWIH)東京
講演言語
:英語

Dissociation/Nation: Narratives of Ruin and Repair in Contemporary American Culture

Abstract

Many commentators would agree that the American nation is, once again, facing a deep crisis. Central to an analysis of the causes is the question: when and how does an “imagined community” (Anderson) stop to imagine – or fail to imagine – its unity or even its shared foundations? And if so, how does it project its ending if the future seems marked by dissociation instead of reconciliation? Within the last decades US-American ruins have become an iconic cultural signifier that represents just that: an ending, both in regional and in national registers of the cultural imaginary. The ruin figures prominently, for instance, in dystopian plots of national downfall due to terrorism and imperial overreach, or in narratives of dramatic decay based on the economic depletion of entire regions, or in plots circling around forms of internal social repression (internal colonization). It is flanked by visions of the foundational pillars of the nation cracking at their seams: The sense of unity, affirmed and reaffirmed in foundational myths and concomitant rituals, is crumbling, as it were, while some argue that it was flawed from the beginning. Examining narratives and representations of the demise of the nation and outright ruination in various kinds of cultural productions, this talk examines the ways in which cultural narratives are re-enacting large-scale cultural crises and pre-enacting scenarios of doom in the present moment. The ruin imaginary, then, will be analyzed in light of concerns ranging from repair to reparation (including atonement in its widest sense) and to projects of reparative justice.