Abstract

ABSTRACT Medical humanities scholars such as Arthur Frank have long argued that subjects being able to tell the story of their lives within a coherent, linear temporal framework is beneficial to the patient’s wellbeing. These models for understanding patient identity, however, often provide a binary model of identity where a subject either has a coherent, linear life narrative, or is a “narrative wreck.” This article argues against the supposition that a comprehensible life trajectory is necessary for narrative self-articulation. It does this through theorizing a concept of foreclosed futurity to describe when a narrative is written without the sense of a clear and foreseeable future. Through engaging with John Frow’s formalist analysis of genre, and the affect theory of Lauren Berlant and Brian Massumi, this article provides a reading of Barbara Peabody’s The Screaming Room that demonstrates how narrative identity can be maintained within the “crisis ordinariness” of a foreclosed future.

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