At the very end of his monumental essay Debt: The First 5000 Years, David Graeber pleads unsurprisingly for the advent of a world free of debt. Like many other critics of capitalism, he invites us to imagine a new world of “genuinely free men and women” who may be able to “make real promises to one another.” What would this world look like? Graeber honestly admits that he has no idea. This talk offers a literary answer to these timely questions: the fiction of bankruptcy. The novels of Stefano Massini (Qualcosa sui Lehman, 2016) and Benjamin Markovits (You Don’t Have to Live Like This, 2015) are rooted in the historical reality of a spectacular payment default caused by unlimited credit (the bankruptcy of the Lehman Bank triggered the 2008 global financial crisis) or incommensurable debt (financially choked by economic and demographic decline, the city of Detroit eventually filed for Chapter 9 Bankruptcy federal protection in 2013). By breaking the downward spiral of debt as much as the crazy growth of an economy based on the logic of credit derivation, default becomes the paradoxical breeding ground for the utopia of debt cancellation: to the frenetic pleasure of the capitalist homo fruor responds the frugality of the dispossessed.
2019 Biographical Sketch
Raphaëlle Guidée is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Poitiers, France. Her research interests include the writing of history, representations of disasters, and political imagination in literature, arts, and social sciences. She is the author of Mémoires de l’oubli: Faulkner, Roth, Perec, Sebald (Classiques Garnier, 2017) and has co-edited several volumes about contemporary literature, melancholy and politics: Hantologies: les fantômes de la modernité (special issue of Otrante, no. 25, 2009); Patrick Modiano (L’Herne, 2012); W. G. Sebald (special issue of Europe, no. 1009, 2013); Utopie et catastrophe (Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2015); Dire les inégalités (Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2017); L’Apocalypse, une imagination politique (Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2018).