From war memory to planetary consciousness: ecological postmemory and reconstructive metamodernism in Richard Flanagan’s Question 7

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17561/grove.v32.9768

Keywords:

Richard Flanagan, postmemory, metamodernism, ecological ethics, trauma, reconstructive postmodernism

Abstract

This article examines Richard Flanagan’s Question 7 (2023) as a transformative work of postmemorial literature that fuses personal, historical, and ecological trauma within a metamodern framework. Drawing on the theories of Marianne Hirsch, Martin Heidegger, and Charlene Spretnak, the analysis traces how the novel expands postmemory beyond familial inheritance to encompass planetary crisis and ecological interconnectedness. Through narrative fragmentation, ethical self-reflection, and a poetics of care, Flanagan’s text models a reconstructive metamodernism that resists nihilism and affirms the profound communion of all life. Ultimately, Question 7 offers an ethics of love and responsibility, inviting readers to dwell authentically and respond to contemporary crises with renewed relationality and hope.

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Author Biography

  • Dr. Christina Howes, Universidad Internacional de Catalunya

    Christina Howes (PhD) specializes in contemporary war literature and postmemorial writing, with research interests in affect theory, spatial phenomenology, and ecological perspectives. Her work explores how literature engages with trauma, memory, and environmental humanities, focusing on the ethical and cultural dimensions of remembrance.

References

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Published

2025-12-31

How to Cite

Howes, C. A. (2025). From war memory to planetary consciousness: ecological postmemory and reconstructive metamodernism in Richard Flanagan’s Question 7. The Grove - Working Papers on English Studies, 32, e9768. https://doi.org/10.17561/grove.v32.9768