Éva Bányai
IN: Partitúra Irodalomtudományi folyóirat, Volume XX. , Issue 2, 2025, page 61-68. , ISSN 1336-7307 DOI: 10.17846/PA.2025.20.2.61-68
Abstract:
Andrea Tompa’s novel Often we don’t die explores the spaces of transculturality and silencing within the context of articulating absence. The novel navigates the liminalities of Hungarian–Romanian–Jewish identities and linguistic hybridity through a narrative tension shaped by absence and silence. As a novel that can also be read as a narrative of lack, one of its central questions becomes how silence finds voice within the transcultural experience.
