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Aesthetics and Politics of Necrofiction

Type: Virtual

Virtual Session

Description

Aesthetics and Politics of Necrofiction
Death is universal; its conditions are not. Nor are its connections to memory. As Judith Butler explains, for death to count, for it to register as a mournable loss, it must first be framed and recognized as the end of a life that counts. Achille Mbembe’s seminal work on “necropolitics” similarly explores how deeply unequal power structures determine the precariousness of life and the visibility of death. In this context, our seminar considers a fundamental question: How does contemporary literature intervene to commemorate the dead and inscribe the memory of invisibilized lives into communal, national, and global histories and narratives? At the core of our discussion will be an exploration of the resonances and potential applications of Oana Panaïté’s notion of “necrofiction.” 
Necrofiction serves here as an overarching theoretical framework to place into dialogue fictional narratives that act as “literary tombs.” Our aim is to investigate how exactly literature can do justice to the irreducible specificity of concrete deaths while simultaneously gesturing towards the universal experience of mortality and the inherent relationships between death and the literary itself. Through this lens, we seek to understand the mechanisms through which literature can act as an ambivalent space of remembrance and a site of critical interrogation.
We invite contributions on practices of writing, reading, and interpreting necrofiction, including: 

The ways necrofictional narratives can sustain memory as an open process or cause its foreclosure. 
The role of literature in bearing witness to forgotten or marginalized individual or collective deaths.
Examinations of the relation between aesthetics and mourning.
Perspectives investigating postcolonial necrofiction.
Analysis of literary portrayals of death as both a shared human condition and a deeply subjective experience.
Challenges and demands of authenticity in narratives of loss and mourning.
How fictional narratives might counter or subvert necropolitical control.

Schedule

Friday, May 30, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Remembering childhood to imagine death: how to share the experience of the dying subject with the reader?
Aline Lebel — Université Paris 10 - Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense
Keeping Vigil for Reena Virk in the Poetics of Soraya Peerbaye’s Tell
Tavleen Purewal — University of New Brunswick
Munnu as Necrofiction: Tombs/Panels of Aspirations
Sahid Mondal — Brandeis University
Sexology, Tombs, and the Aesthetics of the Serial: C. P. Cavafy's Queer Necropoetics
Billie Mitsikakos — University of Oxford
Queering Death and Waste: Ecological Reimagining in The Waste Tide
Carissa Ma — Florida Atlantic University
Saturday, May 31, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

The Ambivalent Poethics of Necrofiction
Oana Panaite — Indiana University Bloomington
Spirited Resistance: Transcending Necropolitics in Elias Khoury’s Yalu
Renee Randall — University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
"Corpse-land étiquette": Code of conduct in Kashmir's Necropolis
Pujarinee Mitra — Texas A&M University
Death Between Madness and Memory: (Im)possible Commemoration in Jean-Luc Raharimanana’s Za
Ioana Pribiag — University of Minnesota Twin Cities
"The Visibility of Death in Alexandre Nanau’s Collective"
Letitia Guran — University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Sunday, June 1, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference