Abstract
XENOLOGY AND XENOTOPOGRAPHY OF BERNHARD WALDENFELS
The paper strives to adapt Bernhard Waldenfels’ xenology and so called
‘xenotopography’ for the philosophico-literary studies in fantastic
world-building with a special concern of the ‘portal-quest’ model of fantasy
and SF. Following Waldenfel’s remarks on the nature of post-
Husserlian diastasis of our world [Heimwelt] and otherworld
[Fremdwelt] and acknowledging the consequences of allocating one’s
attitude towards the otherness in the symbolical borderland [‘sphere of
intermonde’] in between, it is examined whether such a model can occur
in the fantastic literature and what may be the consequence of xenotopographic
reconsideration of its basic ontological premises. Additionally,
the article offers an original xenotopograpfic model of worldbuilding
which addresses three carefully chosen case studies of fantastic
worlds from Orson Scott Card’s Ender’s Game tetralogy, Neil Gaiman’s
Stardust and George R. R. Martin’s The Song of Ice and Fire. In the
end, it is suggested that hitherto presented xenotopography gravely
inspired a postmodern shift in the genres of fantasy and SF which results
in more ethically conscious representations of the otherness and
even more concise and alien comprehensive world-building.