The doctoral thesis investigates how literary representations of different water bodies spark ideas about borders and experiences of escape and exile in a globalised world. The key idea underpinning this study is to explore the analogy between water as an element which changes in shape and texture, and borders as performative constructs. Modelling the fluid borderscapes concept for analysis, the study examines representations of waterscapes in contemporary German-language novels by Bánk, Stani?ic, Seiler, Kinsky, and Ransmayr. Set in different contexts, the Bosnian war, Yugoslavia's disintegration, the Hungarian revolution, the GDR, the aftermath of World War II, and a dystopian version of Europe, the narrations imagine questions of belonging amid shifting borders. The analytical chapters showcase the interrelations between the bodies of water on the one hand and concepts of borders as well as bordering practices on the other. The study further elaborates on fluid modes of writing that are linked to the characters' interactions with water as well as the narrative composition of places and timespaces.
Franziska Müller holds a binational PhD/Dr. phil. from the universities of Warwick and Gießen in German Studies/Germanistik. She has obtained her MA in transcultural and anglophone literatures at the universities of Bremen and Mannheim. Her key research interests are Cultural Border Studies, migration, exile and Literary Ecologies. |