Narrating General Performance: Art, Life, and Labor in Niña Weijers's The Consequences and Tom McCarthy's Satin Island

Authors
Publication date 2021
Journal Criticism
Volume | Issue number 63 | 4
Pages (from-to) 355-380
Number of pages 26
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
This essay explores the fascination with performance and performance art in contemporary fiction in relation to post-Fordist culture and society. I employ the concept of general performance in order to analyze configurations of artistic, professional, and economic performance in Niña Weijers’s novel The Consequences (2014) and Tom McCarthy’s Satin Island (2015). The readings demonstrate that, in different ways, both novels imagine performance as a key practice at the intersection of art, life, and labor. While Satin Island presents a bleak view of generalized post-Fordist performance, The Consequences insists on discontinuities between artistic and other forms of performance. The essay makes a case for general performance as a key concept for the study of the imagination of immaterial and creative labor in twenty-first-century fiction.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.13110/criticism.63.4.0355
Published at https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/narrating-general-performance-art-life-labor-niña/docview/2615626067/se-2?accountid=14615 https://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/criticism/vol63/iss4/2/
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