Abstract
Kazuo Ishiguro’s most experimental novel, The Unconsoled (1995), features the travails of its narrator-protagonist Ryder, a distinguished concert-pianist visiting an unnamed central European city sometime in the late-twentieth century. The novel foregrounds Ryder’s minor emotions of irritation and anxiety as they are manifested side by side with his semi-amnesia, his cognitive dissonance, and his occasionally altered states of consciousness. But the novel’s epistemological uncertainties, together with its circular formal structure, its temporal instability, and its disconcertingly wild causality, articulate an anxiety in or of narrative itself. And yet, narrative irritation and anxiety do not remain quietly within the framework of narrative form: they infect, in the first place, its characters, but through their contagious quality, these affects also have effects, secondly, on the novel’s readers, who are often left irritated and anxious by its seemingly interminable vicissitudes. The Unconsoled suggests that the governing emotions of late modernism are the non-redemptive minor affects of irritation and anxiety.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 71-87 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Journal of Modern Literature |
Volume | 47 |
Issue number | 3 |
Early online date | 13 Jul 2024 |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 13 Jul 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© The Trustees of Indiana University.
Research Groups and Themes
- Centre for Humanities Health and Science
Keywords
- Kazuo Ishiguro
- The Unconsoled
- irritation
- anxiety
- wild causality
- affect