Occurrence in the Immediate Unreality
By (author) UNIV PLYMOUTH By (artist) Anca Boeriu Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
Publication date:
16 December 2014Publisher
University of Plymouth PressISBN-13: 9781841023434
Max Blecher’s work of autobiographical fiction employs poetic prose to explore his ideas of self-identity and the body. An intimate and frank account, Occurrence in the Immediate Unreality is unsettling as it examines and lays bare what Blecher terms ‘the crisis of unreality’ in relation to the human condition and details the ‘bizarre adventure of being a man’ from the perspective of Blecher who never fully experienced manhood owing to his contraction of tuberculosis in 1928. What is offered to the reader then, is Blecher’s experiences of being a physically infirm adolescent experiencing the simultaneous struggle of social isolation and sexual awakening.
What makes Max Blecher akin to Kafka, Bruno Schulz or Robert Walser is above all the faculty of inhabiting misfortune, of accepting it as a condition of ongoing life. Before the disease manifests itself, he observes a systematic aggression against him on the part of the universe. Things emerge from their neutrality and besiege him, seeking to fascinate or terrorise him.