Abstract
This article examines Christine Montalbetti’s novel Plus rien que les vagues et le vent (2014) (Nothing but Waves and Wind, 2017) to propose the ocean as a model to think about contemporary masculinities. This French road novel depicts homosociality in the post-2008 American landscape through the perspective of an outsider homodiegetic narrator. The ocean serves as a narrative model for the novel: its bodily connection with the characters embodies “hybrid masculinities” that emerge from a hybridity of patterns in an ongoing process of negotiation, appropriation and reformulation. In their travels, the characters eventually meet the ocean and testify to a fluid ontology that overturns the Modern detachment from the environment together with its humanist conception of “Man.” The ocean’s waves suggest a nonlinear timeline and an ongoing posthumanist reformation of subjectivities, like the ever-reshaping shorelines. In Montalbetti’s novel, the ocean as a model for hybrid masculinities accounts for novel forms of power relationships, where radical openness pairs with violence.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 167-179 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Subjectivity |
Volume | 31 |
Issue number | 2 |
Early online date | 19 Feb 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2024 |
Keywords
- Christine Montalbetti
- Masculinities
- Ocean
- Posthuman
- Road novel
- Wet ontology