{"title":"NASMIJANO BEZUMLJE U IZVANBRODSKOM DNEVNIKU SLOBODANA NOVAKA","authors":"Dragan Gligora","doi":"10.22210/UR.2019.063.1_2.04","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"SMILING INSANITY IN OUTBOARD LOG BOOK BY SLOBODAN NOVAK\n\nThe paper argues that the starting point of Novak’s novel Outboard Log Book is a\n“twisted” world based on a paradox, which influences the main elements and strategies of narration. Due to this “twisted” feature of the novel, which is determined\nmostly politically and ideologically, the “disturbed perspective” prevails in the text.\nSince the basic strategy in the novel is the pun, i.e. world play, whose symbolism\nand meanings interconnect the plot, composition, narration, and the signifiers. The\ncharacter of Magistar, transformed into a fool and an outcast in this upside-down\nworld, can oppose the ideology and language as its main stronghold, only with\n“silence ideology” (known from previous Novak’s novels We Should Think Further,\nSouthern Thoughts, and It Should Die Logically.), or he can try “to undermine it with\nthe language itself”. When the world cannot be interpreted by language, almost all\nits functions are lost. What remains is the poetic function that becomes embedded\nin irony. The paradigmatic syntagm a shell that makes a noise embodies the individuality and further justifies literariness. However, it becomes obvious that even\nthat “pledge” of art can be both disruptive and contradictory. The protagonist’s\nreturn to the island signals a circular structure of the key narrative strand, as well\nas his journey. Puns, playing with paradoxes, twists and replacements, as well as\n“the aspiration for logical dying” “are reconciled” at the end of the third part of\nthe novel entitled Necropolis, which is visible in the “equalization of the opposing\nworlds”, and in finding a solution to the problem of temporality.","PeriodicalId":371506,"journal":{"name":"Umjetnost riječi: časopis za znanost o književnosti, izvedbenoj umjetnosti i filmu","volume":"37 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-03-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Umjetnost riječi: časopis za znanost o književnosti, izvedbenoj umjetnosti i filmu","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22210/UR.2019.063.1_2.04","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
SMILING INSANITY IN OUTBOARD LOG BOOK BY SLOBODAN NOVAK
The paper argues that the starting point of Novak’s novel Outboard Log Book is a
“twisted” world based on a paradox, which influences the main elements and strategies of narration. Due to this “twisted” feature of the novel, which is determined
mostly politically and ideologically, the “disturbed perspective” prevails in the text.
Since the basic strategy in the novel is the pun, i.e. world play, whose symbolism
and meanings interconnect the plot, composition, narration, and the signifiers. The
character of Magistar, transformed into a fool and an outcast in this upside-down
world, can oppose the ideology and language as its main stronghold, only with
“silence ideology” (known from previous Novak’s novels We Should Think Further,
Southern Thoughts, and It Should Die Logically.), or he can try “to undermine it with
the language itself”. When the world cannot be interpreted by language, almost all
its functions are lost. What remains is the poetic function that becomes embedded
in irony. The paradigmatic syntagm a shell that makes a noise embodies the individuality and further justifies literariness. However, it becomes obvious that even
that “pledge” of art can be both disruptive and contradictory. The protagonist’s
return to the island signals a circular structure of the key narrative strand, as well
as his journey. Puns, playing with paradoxes, twists and replacements, as well as
“the aspiration for logical dying” “are reconciled” at the end of the third part of
the novel entitled Necropolis, which is visible in the “equalization of the opposing
worlds”, and in finding a solution to the problem of temporality.