“Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy

This article examines the way the Scottish writer Louise Welsh contributes to the trend of postapocalyptic fiction in the 21st century, with her plague times trilogy. Relying on the critical and theoretical writing of Michael Foessel, Jean-Paul Engélibert, Bertrand Gervais, Denis Mellier, Hélène Mac...

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Main Author: Marie-Odile PITTIN-HEDON
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2022-06-01
Series:E-REA
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/14054
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author Marie-Odile PITTIN-HEDON
author_facet Marie-Odile PITTIN-HEDON
author_sort Marie-Odile PITTIN-HEDON
collection DOAJ
description This article examines the way the Scottish writer Louise Welsh contributes to the trend of postapocalyptic fiction in the 21st century, with her plague times trilogy. Relying on the critical and theoretical writing of Michael Foessel, Jean-Paul Engélibert, Bertrand Gervais, Denis Mellier, Hélène Machinal and François Hartog, it shows that Welsh’s trilogy, which spans the whole catastrophe from the outbreak of the virus to the aftermath of the apocalypse, borrows from the essential tropes of the genre to reflect upon the necessity for humans to relate to their past and their future, but also to relate to themselves and to each other. Welsh depicts a presentist world, where the chaos of the pandemic has severed all connection to people’s past, which precludes any meaningful projection into the future. The temporal closure is given spatial treatment, and the characters in the last volume are turned into collectors of fragments from the material past and from the political past. Welsh also uses the generic codes of crime to recapture the severed link, or create a new one, and to question the new world order that her novels depict.
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publisher Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)
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spelling doaj-art-db7bddde54e34a739f03b8f6779041932025-01-09T12:55:02ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182022-06-0119210.4000/erea.14054“Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogyMarie-Odile PITTIN-HEDONThis article examines the way the Scottish writer Louise Welsh contributes to the trend of postapocalyptic fiction in the 21st century, with her plague times trilogy. Relying on the critical and theoretical writing of Michael Foessel, Jean-Paul Engélibert, Bertrand Gervais, Denis Mellier, Hélène Machinal and François Hartog, it shows that Welsh’s trilogy, which spans the whole catastrophe from the outbreak of the virus to the aftermath of the apocalypse, borrows from the essential tropes of the genre to reflect upon the necessity for humans to relate to their past and their future, but also to relate to themselves and to each other. Welsh depicts a presentist world, where the chaos of the pandemic has severed all connection to people’s past, which precludes any meaningful projection into the future. The temporal closure is given spatial treatment, and the characters in the last volume are turned into collectors of fragments from the material past and from the political past. Welsh also uses the generic codes of crime to recapture the severed link, or create a new one, and to question the new world order that her novels depict.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/14054crime fictionPost-apocalipticismpresentismthe contemporaryfaire mondeNeo antiquarians
spellingShingle Marie-Odile PITTIN-HEDON
“Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy
E-REA
crime fiction
Post-apocalipticism
presentism
the contemporary
faire monde
Neo antiquarians
title “Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy
title_full “Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy
title_fullStr “Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy
title_full_unstemmed “Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy
title_short “Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy
title_sort signing off on the right side of history relating in louise welsh s apocalyptic trilogy
topic crime fiction
Post-apocalipticism
presentism
the contemporary
faire monde
Neo antiquarians
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/14054
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