Slovo a Smysl (Dec 2015)

The Beauty of Compacting Human Heads. Metaphors of Writing and the History of Book Destruction in Bohumil Hrabal’s Too Loud a Solitude // The Beauty of Compacting Human Heads Metaphors of Writing and the History of Book Destruction in Bohumil Hrabal’s Too Loud a Solitude

  • Heike Winkel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 24
pp. 180 – 195

Abstract

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The article offers an analysis of Bohumil Hrabal’s novel Příliš hlučná samota (Too Loud a Solitude) as a literary reflection of the history of censorship and book destruction in Bohemia. In terms of media theory, this history is a counterpart to the history of letter printing. Haňťa represents an anachronistic reader, resisting book destruction by insisting on a corporealistic, sensual notion of literature, which is inspired most notably by the work of François Rabelais. Thus, Hrabal offers a critique of the decline of reading culture in the Socialist era that is not just a political comment, but also an artistic vision of the beauty of destruction as well as a complex critique of writing and reading.

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