The Public Intellectual as Survivor: The Cases of Josef Haslinger and Kathrin Röggla

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2012 (159):120-131 (2012)
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Abstract

ExcerptThis article compares two fairly recent autobiographical works about the experiences of two highly publicized global disasters: Josef Haslinger's Phi Phi Island: Ein Bericht (2004) and Kathrin Röggla's really ground zero: 11. september und folgendes (2001). Röggla was in lower Manhattan on September 11, 2001. Haslinger was a victim of the 2004 tsunami in Thailand, where he vacationed with his family. Both tell stories that are at once intensely personal, relating threats to the narrator's very existence, and decidedly public, as the events in question were broadcast around the world and subject to prolific media commentary and overwhelming visual representation

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