Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2008, Side 132

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2008, Side 132
130 PAPER BOAT IN ROUCH WATERS ln the article "Barbara and the Dano-Faroese Moment", Leyvoy Joensen connects Bakhtin's chronotope to Jacobsen's novel (Joensen 2000:78). Where Joensen primarily attaches the hybridity of the novel to liter- ary and cultural history, my analysis demon- strates how the novel celebrates the het- erogenous experience with reference to the problematic of representation in general and to literature in particular. In other words the figure of heterotopia in Barbara can also be read as a convergence between meaning and contingency.4 From Foucault’s perspective, the ship is the heterotopia par excellence (Foucault 1986: 27). In Barbara as well, the most cru- cial heterotopia is the ship, named Fortuna. The Fortuna sails between the Faroes and Denmark, and when it arrives in the Faroese capital of Tórshavn, it sets the entire town in motion.5 In accordance with Foucault’s idea of heterotopia, the Fortuna is represented as a counter-site that challenges the place and causes daily life to cease. Beginning with the message that the Fortuna is a about to arrive vibrations are sent through the little com- munity. These vibrations manifest them- selves as external movements in the form of people being on the lookout, windows that open and people hastening down toward the beach. The otherwise slow rhythm of daily life in Tórshavn is abruptly interrupted by a more rapid rhythm and a festive mood. The ship arrives from another, larger world, a cause for both concern and excitement. Through the movements of the Fortuna the novel reveals a discord between the tem- poral and the spatial dimension. The hetero- topia of the novel is an answer to this divi- sion of modern times in terms of a condensed communication between mean- ing and contingency. I read the novel's reac- tion to the process of modernity as an ex- pression of an identity which is conflicting in a communicating way. Throughout the novel the returning For- tuna is an image of an ambiguous modernity. The entry of the outside world in the small community creates a contact zone between two very different worlds: a local peasant culture and a modern European culture. In this way, the isolated world in the middle of the ocean becomes controlled by an un- known power, which is the modern Fortuna, i.e., the goddess of happiness and fate in the guise of modernity. The ship Fortuna shows the path forward toward a more easily mov- ing, fluid world. Mr. Poul arrives to the Faroes with the Fortuna at the beginning of the novel. FHis ar- rival demonstrates the anxiety and tension that the Fortuna creates in the little town. In the same way as the Fortuna gets life going in Tórshavn, the locality obtains its dynamic by virtue of the way it acts on the stranger. The turbulence which the Fortuna creates in the urban setting also continues in Mr. Poul as an inneranxiety. The novel is a drama of des- tiny, and the plot points inevitably forward toward instability. Mr. Poul is depicted as a young, promising theologian who is re- garded as being well suited to 'restore peace and tranquillity and good habits' to the Faroe Islands (Jacobsen 1939: 35). Flowever, the promising theologian becomes a victim of the anxiety generated by his relationship to Barbara. In the end, he stands to be 'judged to bedefrocked fordereliction of of- fice and desperate behaviour' (ibid: 211). Mr. Poul's anxiety has its roots in the
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