Heiddegerian enframing, nihilism & affectlessness in J.G. Ballard's crash

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Abstract

J.G. Ballard‟s novel Crash (1973) allows a reading in the terms of Heidegger‟s concept of Ge-stell or enframing, according to which in modernity everything, humans included, is seen as a mere means to often questionable ends. Prompted by violent sexual fantasies and an unleashed death drive, its main characters, a wild bunch of symphorophiliac drivers, live a life of existential nihilism, treating human beings as objects, mere fodder for their prearranged car crashes. In so doing, they take an active part in a general process of dehumanisation afflicting Western civilisation, where people are just standing reserve (Bestand). This would be closely linked to so-called affectlessness, where emotions go nowhere but to an ever-increasing self-absorption in a world without others. In turn, this would be symptomatic of a civilisational shift from word to image, in a society where technology and performativity reign supreme and everything is evacuated of meaning.

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APA

Fernández, C. S. (2019). Heiddegerian enframing, nihilism & affectlessness in J.G. Ballard’s crash. International Journal of English Studies, 19(1), 59–75. https://doi.org/10.6018/ijes.359191

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