Sunken worlds, open wounds: Geology and trauma in the work of Elisabeth Filhol
Élisabeth Filhol's novel "Doggerland" (2019, English translation 2020) intertwines the present of a storm raging over the North Sea with the deep past of a submerged landscape that once connected Great Britain to the European continent. At its heart are geologist Margaret and engineer Marc, who reunite twenty years after their separation—embedded in a narrative that intertwines personal biographies with geological, climatic, and mythological timescales. While Margaret scientifically reconstructs prehistoric Doggerland, Marc works on the industrial exploitation of the very geological strata she is researching. The novel unfolds amidst storm warnings, fossilized forests, tectonic visions, and the epilogue of a Stone Age catastrophe, transforming the North Sea into a space where past, present, and future are inextricably intertwined. This review analyzes "Doggerland" as a poetic-scientific reflection on the agency of nature and the vulnerability of human life plans. It shows how Filhol uses geological processes—isostasis, glacial dynamics, tectonic rifts—not merely as a backdrop, but as structuring metaphors for psychological trauma, memory, and recurrence. The essay explores how mythological semanticizations (the storm as a goddess, the ice as a breathing organism) merge with precise scientific language. The review argues that "Doggerland" undermines the illusion of human control in the Anthropocene: nature appears not as a resource or backdrop, but as an independent, cyclically active force that shapes individual and collective history—and can return from the depths at any time.
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