“I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn

This article analyzes Jonathan Lethem’s neuronovel, Motherless Brooklyn (1999) in the light of Mikhail Bakhtin’s theory of the grotesque and laughter. The specificity of the novel lies the first-person narrator and leading character suffering from Tourette’s syndrome and appropriating the nickname “...

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Main Author: Pascale Antolin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française d'Etudes Américaines 2020-07-01
Series:Transatlantica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/13941
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author Pascale Antolin
author_facet Pascale Antolin
author_sort Pascale Antolin
collection DOAJ
description This article analyzes Jonathan Lethem’s neuronovel, Motherless Brooklyn (1999) in the light of Mikhail Bakhtin’s theory of the grotesque and laughter. The specificity of the novel lies the first-person narrator and leading character suffering from Tourette’s syndrome and appropriating the nickname “freak of nature” he was given as a child. Thereby, he plays a double role: he is both “the grotesque freak” exhibited on the platform / page, and the freakshow talker constructing the freak from his condition. The novel turns into a freakshow, not in the sense of the sordid spectacle of the past, but as a construction questioning both the social and the literary order. Through the grotesque and laughter, Lethem challenges the traditional representation of disability—and the stereotype of the disabled person—and also the major genres his novel borrows from: detective fiction and the coming-of-age narrative. The book turns into parody, in the Bakhtinian sense, i.e., both a homage to and a rewriting of traditional genres. Lethem also takes advantage of his narrator’s symptomatic verbal outbursts and penchant for grotesque images and word play to shift disability paradigm—turning stigma into asset—and revitalize illness literature.
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spelling doaj-art-3c804bd02f044c8b822487e50cb035ca2025-01-30T10:43:42ZengAssociation Française d'Etudes AméricainesTransatlantica1765-27662020-07-01110.4000/transatlantica.13941“I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless BrooklynPascale AntolinThis article analyzes Jonathan Lethem’s neuronovel, Motherless Brooklyn (1999) in the light of Mikhail Bakhtin’s theory of the grotesque and laughter. The specificity of the novel lies the first-person narrator and leading character suffering from Tourette’s syndrome and appropriating the nickname “freak of nature” he was given as a child. Thereby, he plays a double role: he is both “the grotesque freak” exhibited on the platform / page, and the freakshow talker constructing the freak from his condition. The novel turns into a freakshow, not in the sense of the sordid spectacle of the past, but as a construction questioning both the social and the literary order. Through the grotesque and laughter, Lethem challenges the traditional representation of disability—and the stereotype of the disabled person—and also the major genres his novel borrows from: detective fiction and the coming-of-age narrative. The book turns into parody, in the Bakhtinian sense, i.e., both a homage to and a rewriting of traditional genres. Lethem also takes advantage of his narrator’s symptomatic verbal outbursts and penchant for grotesque images and word play to shift disability paradigm—turning stigma into asset—and revitalize illness literature.https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/13941detective fictionLethem (Jonathan)neuronovelTourette’sfreakfreakshow
spellingShingle Pascale Antolin
“I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn
Transatlantica
detective fiction
Lethem (Jonathan)
neuronovel
Tourette’s
freak
freakshow
title “I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn
title_full “I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn
title_fullStr “I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn
title_full_unstemmed “I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn
title_short “I am a freak of nature”: Tourette’s and the Grotesque in Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn
title_sort i am a freak of nature tourette s and the grotesque in jonathan lethem s motherless brooklyn
topic detective fiction
Lethem (Jonathan)
neuronovel
Tourette’s
freak
freakshow
url https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/13941
work_keys_str_mv AT pascaleantolin iamafreakofnaturetourettesandthegrotesqueinjonathanlethemsmotherlessbrooklyn