Autobiography and Cankar’s novel New life

Authors

  • Alojzija Zupan Sosič University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Arts , Univerza v Ljubljani, Filozofska fakulteta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18690/scn.15.2.143–160.2022

Keywords:

autobiography, experientiality, frankness, provocativeness, auto/ reflexivity, New Life

Abstract

In the discussion, Cankar’s modern understanding of autobiography offered the possibility of explanation with the help of the concept of experientiality. In Cankar’s narrative works, including the novel New Life (1908), the question of objectivity and subjectivity comes into contact with the share of autobiography in an innovative way – the author, narrator or character no longer asks the classic positivist question about the verifiability of biographical data, but emphasises the importance of experientiality, which became the starting point
in connection with the narrative only later, in so-called natural narratology by Monika Fludernik. In Cankar’s narratives, including in the novel New Life, the experientiality is equated with frankness, which acts as a provocation in places due to the fake position of testimony or confession. In addition to experientiality, frankness and provocativeness, the novel in question also has self-reflexivity, which is outlined by the auto-thematic nature and the similar profile of the main character, that is, Anton Grivar.

Author Biography

  • Alojzija Zupan Sosič, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Arts, Univerza v Ljubljani, Filozofska fakulteta

    Ljubljana, Slovenia. E-mail: alojzija.zupan-sosic@guest.arnes.si

Published

26.10.2022

How to Cite

Zupan Sosič, A. (2022). Autobiography and Cankar’s novel New life. Slavia Centralis, 15(2), 143–160. https://doi.org/10.18690/scn.15.2.143–160.2022

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