More than Death

Traversing the Enchanted Ravine with Archetypal Children in Ray Bradbury’s Illinois

Authors

  • Christian Wilken

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18060/28542

Keywords:

Illinois, sacred space, object-oriented ontology, new materialism

Abstract

This article examines Ray Bradbury's Illinois stories, focusing on “the ravine” as a liminal space that bridges the mundane and the supernatural. The characters' journey through this ravine echoes mythological and literary motifs, embodying Kierkegaardian anxiety and Eliade's concept of sacred space. The ravine, imbued with a spectral agency, represents a primordial realm predating civilization, challenging both children and readers to confront existential and ontological questions. By engaging with contemporary philosophical perspectives like Object-Oriented Ontology and New Materialism, the analysis traces how Bradbury's depiction of the natural world fosters a materialist re-enchantment and underscores the palpable connection between childhood sensibilities and cosmic mysteries. The article situates Bradbury's work within the tradition of gothic literature, highlighting his unique contribution to the genre through the ontological and metaphysical renegotiation experienced by his young protagonists.

Author Biography

Christian Wilken

Christian Wilken is a lecturer at the University of Düsseldorf and a research associate and lecturer at the University of Koblenz, specializing in weird fiction, gothic, and postmodernism. He is a member of the “Hauntology and Spectrality Research Network” at York St John University. Additionally, Christian is involved in the DFG-funded “Traveling Bodies” network, exploring themes related to corporeality in traveling literature. His interdisciplinary and transcultural research is supported by a PhD in English and American Literature, and degrees in Comparative Literature and Japanese Studies. His monograph Reading Lovecraft in the Anthropocene is forthcoming with Routledge in 2025. 

Downloads

Published

2024-09-20

How to Cite

Wilken, C. (2024). More than Death: Traversing the Enchanted Ravine with Archetypal Children in Ray Bradbury’s Illinois. The New Ray Bradbury Review, (8), 81–97. https://doi.org/10.18060/28542

Issue

Section

Articles