Sensual Grass Touching Humid Skin: Finding Love in the Relationship between Subject and Landscape

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Date

2016

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Publisher

LIR. journal

Abstract

The starting point of this article is the notion of landscapes as intra-active places for dwelling and becoming. Informed by feminist and material ecocritical theory, it aims to make visible a connection between vegetation, water, dirt, affect, and subjects in literary texts. Against a comparative backdrop of the work of the French philosopher and writer Simone de Beauvoir, the article looks at the relationship between humans and nature in contemporary Swedish literature. The analyses explore three fictional young women’s experiences of being-innature in three novels: Hanna Nordenhök’s Det vita huset i Simpang (The White House in Simpang) (2013), Sara Stridsberg’s Happy Sally (2004) and Mare Kandre’s Bübins unge (Bübin’s kid) (1987). The purpose is to investigate how literary texts can depict and convey experiences of sensuality, embodiment, and belonging within landscapes as something meaningful in terms of the subject’s continuous process of becoming. It is argued that the novels articulate intimate and tactile bonds between the young women and the organic en vironment that combine creation and destruction, sometimes resembling notions of love.

Description

Johanna Lindbo has been accepted to the PhD program in comparative literature at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, beginning in the fall of 2016. Her master thesis explored interactions between human and more-than-human bodies in the novels of Swedish author Hanna Nordenhök, with particular focus on vegetation, porosity, and memories in a material ecocritical perspective.

Keywords

embodiment, Hanna Nordenhök, landscape, Mare Kandre, material ecocriticism, Sara Stridsberg

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