Non-responsiveness is commonly associated with negativity, with the pain of being ignored. We want to shift the focus from the threat that disrupted communication entails to the joy that arises from refusing to respond. In today's information networks, it seems impossible to escape the imperative to connect. Can modes of withdrawal provide a break from 21st century regimes of transparency? Or is unavailability the necessary consequence of an emotional paradigm of independence and optimization? Not every 'I would prefer not to' can claim innocent neutrality. Without idealizing gestures of…mehr
Non-responsiveness is commonly associated with negativity, with the pain of being ignored. We want to shift the focus from the threat that disrupted communication entails to the joy that arises from refusing to respond. In today's information networks, it seems impossible to escape the imperative to connect. Can modes of withdrawal provide a break from 21st century regimes of transparency? Or is unavailability the necessary consequence of an emotional paradigm of independence and optimization? Not every 'I would prefer not to' can claim innocent neutrality. Without idealizing gestures of disconnection and glorifying the analogue, the pleasures of cutting ties, troubling hierarchies, and subverting responsibilities guide our argument.Some of the articles contained here explore the answers that feminist discourses provide to the pressure of making oneself available, while others interrogate cultural phenomena that emerge from new technology, such as ghosting. With the rupture of the relationship between sender and receiver, the premises of reading itself are at stake. From the German 18th century epistolary novel to contemporary American short fiction, the literature analyzed displays some of the disconcerting blind spots of narration and language. 'The Joy of Not Responding' proposes a novel paradigm for understanding the central problems of late capitalist society, one which also sheds light on the interlinking of economic, romantic, and affective spheres in ways that have, until now, not been well understood.
Anna Hordych is a research assistant at the Department for German Studies at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich. She has studied Comparative Literature and Literary Theory at the LMU Munich, at the University Paris Sorbonne-IV, and at King's College London. She is currently completing her dissertation, "The Price of Indifference," in which she focuses on forms of (monetary) disinterest and social equivalence in 19th century prose. Her research interests include the entanglement of economics and conduct, the aesthetics of the everyday, and poetics of the novella.Marie-Luise Goldmann is an editor for the culture section of "Welt". She holds a PhD in German Literature from New York University (2021) and a B. A. in Philosophy and German Literature from Humboldt-Universität Berlin (2015). She is the recipient of research and teaching fellowships at Universität Zürich, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Freie Universität Berlin, and NYU Berlin. Her publications on Realist novellas and ghosting in contemporary literature have appeared in "Monatshefte, Colloquia Germanica", and "Jahrbuch der Raabe-Gesellschaft."
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