

Fiction and the Fantastic: Tales by Jan Potocki and Isak Dinesen
Jun 3, 2025
Adam Thirlwell, a novelist and critic known for his thought-provoking writings, joins to explore the rich Gothic landscape of Jan Potocki and Isak Dinesen. The conversation dives into Potocki’s complex tales of desire and guilt during the Enlightenment, revealing the intricate narrative structures that challenge perception. Thirlwell highlights Dinesen's unsettling exploration of sexual guilt, seamlessly weaving through themes of identity and heritage. Their discussion illuminates how the Gothic genre captures the darker corners of human experience that other narratives might shy away from.
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Complex Nested Fantastic Narrative
- The Manuscript Found in Saragossa is a complex nested narrative resembling 18th century Arabian Nights.
- It explores identity, inheritance, and the blurry line between reality and fantasy.
Reality vs Hallucination Blur
- The novel blurs reality and hallucination, illustrated by a gruesome scene under a gibbet with bandit corpses.
- This challenges readers to question what is truly real, a core theme of the fantastic.
Language Shapes Reality
- Characters in the novel model their lives on romances, showing how language shapes reality.
- The duality of the sisters recurs ambiguously, complicating what's real within realities.