Ethiques du corps dans Antarctica de Claire Keegan

A selection of stories from Claire Keeganʼs first collection Antarctica (1999) is here examined through the perspective of ethos. Each story, the author argues, illustrates the clash between two etymological meanings of ethos through a dramatic conflict between inherited practices and the idiosyncra...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: E. Vernadakis
Format: Conference Object
Language:French
Published: Presses Universitaires de Caen 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://okina.univ-angers.fr/publications/ua9322
Description
Summary:A selection of stories from Claire Keeganʼs first collection Antarctica (1999) is here examined through the perspective of ethos. Each story, the author argues, illustrates the clash between two etymological meanings of ethos through a dramatic conflict between inherited practices and the idiosyncratic disposition of the characters (i.e. tradition vs. taste). The contrast is explored within a frame which brings together Camille Pagliaʼs theory of literature and the arts as an extension of the archaic connection between sexuality and religion and Judith Butlerʼs theory of performativity. Within this frame one of the storiesʼ major features is a taste for taking risks. Instead of putting the body at a distance for the mind’s sake, Keeganʼs stories seem to invite the reader to take the risk of exploring it (i.e. the body), even if such a risk may lead to death.