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Marco Caracciolo

Researcher at Ghent University

Publications -  86
Citations -  852

Marco Caracciolo is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Narrative & Narratology. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 69 publications receiving 668 citations. Previous affiliations of Marco Caracciolo include University of Groningen & University of Bologna.

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Anthropocene, literature, and econarratology: An interview with Marco Caracciolo

TL;DR: In this paper , Caracciolo sheds light on the use of such concepts as the Anthropocene, climate crisis and climate change fiction in literary studies and elaborates on the tardiness of narratological interests in environmental issues and narrative's formal affordance to address the anthropocene condition.
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The Weird and the Meta in Jeff VanderMeer's Dead Astronauts

Marco Caracciolo, +1 more
- 13 Jan 2022 - 
TL;DR: This article examined Jeff VanderMeer's Dead Astronauts (2019) as part of a wave of recent works that mark a sharp departure from the immersive strategies with which weird fiction is typically associated, arguing that this encounter between the weird and the meta is particularly effective in bringing out the strange entanglement of human societies and the nonhuman world in times of climate crisis, serving as a powerful model for future iterations of the weird.

Enthymema XXIX 2022 Cognitive Literary Studies: A Conversation with Marco Caracciolo, Monika Fludernik, Patrick Colm Hogan and Karin Kukkonen

TL;DR: The authors proposed a conversation on Cognitive Literary Studies with Marco Caracciolo, Monika Fludernik, Patrick Colm Hogan, and Karin Kukkonen, starting from a methodological reflection on the interdisciplinarity of this field, the scholars were asked to consider its foundations by focusing on the relationship between science and literature, and lastly to ponder the prospects of narrative theory, cognitive narratology and literary universals.
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Materiality, Nonlinearity, and Interpretive Openness in Contemporary Archaeogames

TL;DR: The authors argue that contemporary games address three central concepts of archaeological theory: the uncertain materiality of archaeological finds, the way in which caring for artifacts complicates a linear or chronological understanding of history, and the open-ended quality of archaeological interpretation.
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Climate Change and the Ironies of Omniscience in Rumaan Alam’s Leave the World Behind

TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore how a centerpiece of nineteenth-century realist fiction, the omniscient narrator, may be reimagined to speak to the imaginative challenges of climate change.