Frauenfiguren in Kathrin Rögglas Prosaband Irres Wetter: sprachliche Inszenierungen
Abstract
This article examines the collection of short stories Irres Wetter (2000) by contemporary author
Kathrin Röggla with the aim of focusing on the narrative and linguistic strategies with which the writer
represents a multifaceted typology of female figures against the background of today’s globalised society.
The environment in which Röggla’s heroines move is Berlin in the 1990s, which, with its consumerism,
precarious work structures and other traits typical of the reality that emerged from the end of real
socialism, profoundly affects the identity and perception of the world of these female subjects. Using
various linguistic and narratological resources such as ad hoc compounds, satirical contrasts or the
omission of the traditional narrator, the writer succeeds in capturing and denouncing the new forms of
inauthentic life generated by the economic and social logic of the present world.