Making Unstrange: Theory and Second-Person Fiction
Abstract
Russian Formalism’s suggestion that artistic literature makes the familiar strange finds echoes
in today’s theories of “unnatural narrative.” “Naturalization” of seemingly strange texts understands
uncanny literary effects as based on qualities of “natural” spoken language. Sifting
through structuralist, pre-structuralist, and psychoanalytic musings on second-person fiction
or similar effects in interpersonal relations, all largely neglected as studies of second-person
narrative were popularized among theorists and critics over the past thirty years, this article
theorizes readers’ ‘realization’ or ‘virtualization’ of second-person address, narratorial apostrophe,
and second-person protagonists. One reason we have no agreed-upon, comprehensive
chart explaining second-person address’s variable effects on various readers (with an appreciative
nod to Sandrine Sorlin), is not that no such chart is impossible — but simply that
any such chart would be complex. Such projects might be nuanced by earlier thoughts focused
on more general theories of psychology, phenomonology, and human exchanges. This
requires more reflection on the fuctions, formulations, and effects of second-person narrative,
but also more thinking about its affects.
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