Is The Map More Interesting Than The Territory? A Post-Representational Approach to Michel Houellebecq’s The Map and the Territory

Ashley Harris, Jonathan Harris

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

This collaborative, interdisciplinary article analyses Houllebecq’s use of crime fiction and autofiction in The Map and the Territory (2010). The novel’s intra- inter- and extra-textual geographies, including its depiction of urban and rural space, are explored through a post-representational lens. We argue that Houllebecq uses crime fiction and autofiction to destabilise and disrupt Baudrillardian signs and simulacra as well as Barthesian mythologies of the author - setting up his own ‘death of the author’ by writing his avatar’s murder. By analysing how the novel 'sets the scene' in its depiction of both Houellebecq and France’s rural and urban spaces, we find that the way the text maps and describes these spaces in/on/through which the novel 'takes place' lends itself to a processual or assemblage understanding of that space, where reality and representation are co-produced relationally. This spatial co-production leads us to productively re-consider the novel's broader themes through this same post-representational lens, and to problematise distinctions between reality and representation, author and text, and map and territory.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 30 Sept 2018
EventInterdisciplinary Approaches to ‘Setting the Scene’: Representations of Rurality in Crime Fiction and Media Culture - Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, United Kingdom
Duration: 15 Jun 201516 Jun 2015

Conference

ConferenceInterdisciplinary Approaches to ‘Setting the Scene’: Representations of Rurality in Crime Fiction and Media Culture
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
CityBelfast
Period15/06/201516/06/2015

Bibliographical note

Inter-Faculty, Inter-Disciplinary paper co-written with Jonathan Harris from the Geography Department of Cambridge University.

Keywords

  • Geo-literary Theory
  • Houellebecq
  • Post-Representation
  • Crime Fiction
  • French Literature

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Is The Map More Interesting Than The Territory? A Post-Representational Approach to Michel Houellebecq’s The Map and the Territory'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this