Abstract
In The Uprising: On Poetry and Finance (2012), Franco ‘Bifo’ Berardi unfolds a political and clinical diagnosis of contemporary society, stating that the crisis we experience today is a permanent state of absent social autonomy and political agency. This crisis is not solely economic but is caused by semio-capitalism impacting all spheres of human life, affecting sensibility in particular—the linguistic and physical-sensuous link between the individual and the world. Taking up the term sensibility as a bodily basis of experience and as an aesthetic notion, in this article I will explore the relation between individual and collective bodies, the crisis as a suspension of change, and literature, focusing on the Danish poet Ursula Andkjær Olsen’s 2017 lunatic and fragmented novel of love and economy The Crisis Notebooks, but also with reference to some of her other work(s). I argue that the bodily experience of crisis, as expressed in this novel, leads to an inhibited social sensibility but also, paradoxically, to a radical openness towards the world. With reference to the Danish literary scholar Anne Fastrup’s interpretation of French vitalism’s idea of sensibility in The Movement of Sensibility (2007), I suggest that a more ambiguous, material notion of both a constructive and a destructive sensibility is crucial for its understanding, and hence—for an understanding of the relationship between body and crisis as expressed in The Crisis Notebooks. Finally, I suggest that an aesthetic notion of sensibility can provide a prism through which relations between today’s financial mechanisms and a sociocultural experience of crisis are rendered visible—if not sensuous—and it is from here that alternatives to the crisis can be found, felt, formulated or fabulated.
Highlights
In her 2017 lunatic, ruptured and rambling novel of love and economy, with its significant three-part title: The Crisis Notebooks
The Crisis Notebooks, appears to outline three kinds of sensibility, which I’ve touched upon in this article: The inhibited, the dysfunctional, and the non-existent. They constitute three relations between the body and crisis; a bodily experience of crisis; a body which in itself is the cause of the experience of crisis, and a denial of body that, because it no longer experiences as such, only enforces the permanent state of crisis
Through the notion of sensibility, as a bodily basis of experience and as an aesthetic notion, in this article I have examined the relationship of crisis, body and literature, in the context of the contemporary economic and financial predicament
Summary
In her 2017 lunatic, ruptured and rambling novel of love and economy, with its significant three-part title: The Crisis Notebooks. Taking up the term sensibility as a bodily basis of experience and as an aesthetic notion, in this article I will explore the relation between individual and collective bodies, the crisis as a suspension of change, and literature, focusing on the Danish poet Ursula Andkjær Olsen’s 2017 lunatic and fragmented novel of love and economy The Crisis Notebooks, and with reference to some of her other work(s).
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