Bültmann & Gerriets
The Geological Unconscious
German Literature and the Mineral Imaginary
von Jason Groves
Verlag: Fordham University Press
Hardcover
ISBN: 978-0-8232-8809-0
Erschienen am 07.07.2020
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 229 mm [H] x 152 mm [B] x 11 mm [T]
Gewicht: 282 Gramm
Umfang: 188 Seiten

Preis: 36,00 €
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Klappentext
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Already in the nineteenth century, German-language writers were contending with the challenge of imagining and accounting for a planet whose volatility bore little resemblance to the images of the Earth then in circulation. The Geological Unconscious traces the withdrawal of the lithosphere as a reliable setting, unobtrusive backdrop, and stable point of reference for literature written well before the current climate breakdown.
Through a series of careful readings of romantic, realist, and modernist works by Tieck, Goethe, Stifter, Benjamin, and Brecht, Groves elaborates a geological unconscious-unthought and sometimes actively repressed geological knowledge-in European literature and environmental thought. This inhuman horizon of reading and interpretation offers a new literary history of the Anthropocene in a period before it was named.
These close readings show the entanglement of the human and the lithic in periods well before the geological turn of contemporary cultural studies. In those depictions of human-mineral encounters, the minerality of the human and the minerality of the imagination become apparent. In registering libidinal investments in the lithosphere that extend beyond Carboniferous deposits and beyond any carbon imaginary, The Geological Unconscious points toward alternative relations with, and less destructive mobilizations of, the geologic.



Introduction | 1
1 Of Other Petrofictions: Reimagining the Mine in German Romanticism | 17
2 Goethe's Erratics: Wandering in Deep Time | 36
3 Many Stranded Stones: Stifter's Spectral Landscapes | 67
4 The Shock of the Earth: Benjamin's Unarticulated Ground | 93
Epilogue: Dilapidated | 115
Acknowledgments | 139
Notes | 143
Bibliography | 157
Index | 171