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Chapter One examines several family resemblances of the literature written on the eastern front. It begins with three traits that are quite common in fiction on absolute war: kaput, the abject, and the writing of cruelty. These three constituents are studied as deployed by Curzio Malaparte in Kaputt (1944) and Theodor Plievier in Stalingrad (1945). Useless suffering and the absurd are the next family resemblances of absolute war writing. Drawing my ideas from the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas, I relate the useless suffering of civilians and soldiers to the senselessness of absolute war in my analysis of Gert Ledig’s Die Stalinorgel (1955) and Vasily Grossman’s Life and Fate (1980, finished 1959). The examination of the suffering of the victim is followed by the study of radical evil in Jonathan Littell’s Les Bienveillantes (2006). A reading of Walter Kempowski’s ten-volume Das Echolot. Ein kollektives Tagebuch (1993-2005) closes Chapter One. In this last section of the chapter I concentrate on the practice of a “total representation” and the ethics of otherness that underpins Das Echolot. All these family resemblances of absolute war writing are studied against the backdrop of the horror unleashed by war in its absolute degree.
The Introduction defines the main concepts of The Literature of Absolute War (i.e., “absolute war,” “absolute enmity,” “total war,” “traumatic realism,” “catastrophic modernism,” and “spectrum of possibilities”) and comments on some of the extreme challenges posed by absolute war to modern war writing.
This book explores for the first time the literature of absolute war in connection to World War II. From a transnational and comparative standpoint, it addresses a set of theoretical, historical, and literary questions, shedding new light on the nature of absolute war, the literature on the world war of 1939–45, and modern war writing in general. It determines the main features of the language of absolute war, and how it gravitates around fundamental semantic clusters, such as the horror, terror, and the specter. The Literature of Absolute War studies the variegated responses given by literary authors to the extreme and seemingly unsolvable challenges posed by absolute war to epistemology, ethics, and language. It also delves into the different poetics that articulate the writing on absolute war, placing special emphasis on four literary practices: traditional realism, traumatic realism, the fantastic, and catastrophic modernism.
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