Theories of Forgetting
Lance Olsen
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Belletristik / Gegenwartsliteratur (ab 1945)
Beschreibung
Theories of Forgetting is concerned with how words matter, the materiality of the page, and how a literary work might react against mass reproduction and textual disembodiment in the digital age--right from its use of two back covers (one "e;upside down"e; and one "e;right-side up"e;) that allow the reader to choose which of the novel's two narratives to privilege.Theories of Forgetting is a narrative in three parts. The first is the story of Alana, a filmmaker struggling to complete a short documentary about Robert Smithson s famous earthwork, The Spiral Jetty, located where the Great Salt Lake meets the desert. Alana falls victim to a pandemic called The Frost, whose symptoms include an increasing sensation of coldness and growing amnesia. The second involves Alana s husband, Hugh, owner of a rare-and-used bookstore in Salt Lake City, and his slow disappearance across Jordan while on a trip both to remember and to forget Alana s death. The third involves marginalia added to Hugh s section by his daughter, Aila, an art critic living in Berlin. Aila discovers a manuscript by her father after his disappearance and tries to make sense of it by means of a one-sided dialogue with her brother, Lance.Each page of the novel is divided in half. Alana s narrative runs across the top of the page, from back to front, while Hugh s and his daughter s tale runs upside down across the bottom of the page, from front to back. How a reader initially happens to pick up Theories of Forgetting determines which narrative is read first, and thereby establishing the reader s meaning-making of the novel.