Logo image
Dead or Alive? The animism of artefact in literature
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Dead or Alive? The animism of artefact in literature

Jay Ludowyke
Text, Vol.20(Special Issue 35), pp.1-14
2016
pdf
PDF - Published Version217.59 kBDownloadView
Published VersionPDF - Published Version Open Access
url
https://doi.org/10.52086/001c.27062View
Published Version

Abstract

Performing Arts and Creative Writing creative writing it-narrative animism death thing theory artefact
Writers commonly use animism to transform inanimate objects into assertive 'things', in possession of metaphysical qualities. In theorising the effects of applying literary animism to a real historical artefact, this study asserts that once enlivened, an artefact can die twice. It dies once with its real-world destruction and a second time when that destruction echoes through its literary thingness. The discussion is framed by examining the history of literary animism. This includes the eighteenth-century itnarrative with animal and object narrators, the transition to children's literature, and the resistance to animism that accompanies modern fiction, in this case, particularly Joanne Harris's Blackberry Wine. Further, it examines the alignment that has emerged between children's literature and true story as a basis for applying animism to artefacts in nonfiction, facilitating their dual-death

Details

Metrics

95 File views/ downloads
352 Record Views
Logo image