The Dissolution of Images of Space and Time in Christian Kracht's Novel 1979
Abstract
1979, the second novel of the Swiss writer Christian Kracht, published in 2001, is an implicit criticism of the culture of Western bourgeoisie. Both with its title and with its setting in Tehran, especially in the first part, the novel reminds us the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran from its start. Kracht's novel depicts Tehran as a modern city. From this perspective, we get to know Tehran as a city where decadent people from all over the world organize jet-set parties, and in the light of this information Tehran as depicted in the novel emerges as a space which is beyond cultures and independent of Eastern identity. However, the date is 1979 and the city is on the threshold of social and political transformation. All in all, the novel does not mainly deal with the fact that city, hence the country, is at a political junction. The novel mainly focuses on an anonymous first person narrator and his partner Christopher who come to the city which is on the verge of the coup. They came to the city for a degenerate party of some degenerate people. After this party, which depicts the Western life style in its degenerated from, Christopher dies at a derelict hospital in one of the city's dark neighbourhoods. Hence, the anonymous protagonist of 1979 decides to travel East as the other of the West. As one gets further away from the West, not only the subject with its Western identity, but all other concepts ascribed to the West also die. Hence, 1979 does not only pinpoint the beginning of a coup in world history, but the novel emerges as a turning point where concepts of space and time are also dissolved as cultural signifiers. The present study expounds on this argument in relation to Christian Kracht's novel 1979.
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