BIROn - Birkbeck Institutional Research Online

    'A row of screaming Russian dolls': escaping the panopticon in David Mitchell's 'Number9dream'

    Harris-Birtill, Rose (2014) 'A row of screaming Russian dolls': escaping the panopticon in David Mitchell's 'Number9dream'. In: Current Research in Speculative Fiction, 20 Jun 2014, Liverpool, UK. (Unpublished)

    Full text not available from this repository.

    Abstract

    David Mitchell’s second novel, number9dream (2001), opens with a triple-tiered panopticon, establishing a preoccupation with containment and escape that resurfaces throughout the text. Entitled ‘Panopticon’, the opening chapter introduces the ‘zirconium gothic skyscraper’ of the PanOpticon building, which guards the secret of the protagonist Eiji’s father’s identity, and becomes a symbol of corporate Tokyo itself (3). A further panopticon in Eiji’s fantasy provides both the title and subject of a film, playing as a surreal counterpoint to his imagined meeting with his father. The effect of these multi-layered panopticons is one of overload. Yet the lack of a tangible, physical prison in an opening chapter besotted with the panopticon establishes a narrative preoccupied with a specific aspect of the panoptic paradigm and that of a virtual and internalised imprisonment, perpetuated through a self-replicating panoptic virality. This paper explores the ways in which the film’s poster art, a ‘row of screaming Russian dolls’, becomes a twisted metaphor for Eiji’s mental containment throughout this coming-of-age novel, as panoptic replications are interrogated on both intra- and extra-diegetic narrative levels. While each layer of the first chapter’s panopticons becomes a metafictional device that reflects Eiji’s wider quest to wrestle agency among his fantasies, Mitchell simultaneously problematises his own panoptic authority over the novel with Eiji’s Calvino-esque narrative deviations, which threaten to subsume the plot entirely. Starting with a discussion of Jeremy Bentham’s eighteenth-century prison designs and principles for psychological control, and Foucault’s reworking of these towards a wider panoptic paradigm, this paper explores number9dream’s multiple panopticons as a representation of Eiji’s fragmented mental state. Building on Foucault’s recognition of an increasing presence of panoptic principles in everyday social structures, this paper investigates Eiji’s experience of a self-perpetuating panoptic model through both legitimised and illegitimate structures of social control, as both Tokyo’s mainstream corporate culture and its violent yakuza counterculture are exposed as competing frameworks from which Eiji must ultimately escape.

    Metadata

    Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
    Keyword(s) / Subject(s): David Mitchell, Number9dream, Panopticon, Foucault, Michel Foucault, Panopticism, Jeremy Bentham, Literature, Contemporary fiction, Literary theory, Narratology, Metafiction, Postmodernism, Italo Calvino, Borges
    School: Birkbeck Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > School of Creative Arts, Culture and Communication
    Depositing User: Administrator
    Date Deposited: 13 Sep 2021 15:05
    Last Modified: 09 Aug 2023 12:51
    URI: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/45807

    Statistics

    Activity Overview
    6 month trend
    0Downloads
    6 month trend
    107Hits

    Additional statistics are available via IRStats2.

    Archive Staff Only (login required)

    Edit/View Item Edit/View Item