Abstract

This article argues that reading Katja Petrowskaja’s Vielleicht Esther in the context of minor literature as a literature of deterritorialisation highlights its sense of liberation and emphasises the creation of associations – aspects that are crucial to this transnational and translingual book about retrieving memory across space and time. Going beyond the idea of a binary relationship between minor and major literature and instead focusing on rhizomatic affiliation emerges as key. A wider framework of analysis is also provided by ideas that derive from or have been developed in conjunction with Deleuze and Guattari’s thinking: the idea of minor transnationalism (Francoise Lionnet, Shu-Mei Shih), the concepts of multi- and translingualism (Leslie Adelson, Steven G. Kellman) and the ethics of relationality (Sara Ahmed) and multidirectionality in postmemory discourses (Hirsch, Rothberg). Combined, these ideas prove to be useful tools for understanding Petrowskaja’s handling of narrative, language and belonging in Vielleicht Esther.

Highlights

  • Katja Petrowskaja was born in Kiev, Ukraine, in 1970

  • This article explores to what extent the act of reading Vielleicht Esther as ‘minor literature’ contributes to an understanding of the text

  • Rather than focusing on questions of gender, I shall argue in this contribution that reading Vielleicht Esther in the context of minor literature as a literature of deterritorialisation underlines the aspect of liberation and highlights the creation of associations that is apt for the reading of this transnational and translingual book about retrieving memory across space and time, if read with an emphasis on the idea of rhizomatic thinking, rather than on the binary relationship between minor and major literature

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Summary

Introduction

Katja Petrowskaja was born in Kiev, Ukraine, in 1970. She grew up speaking Russian but started learning German in her mid-twenties, moved to Berlin in 1999 and wrote her (so far only) book, Vielleicht Esther [Maybe Esther], in German.

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