Everything and Nothing

The Horror of Meaning in The Cipher

Authors

  • Alexander Sell University at Buffalo (SUNY)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/imaginingtheimpossible.145604

Keywords:

Kathe Koja, horror, martin heidegger, nothing, weird fiction, The Cipher, New Weird

Abstract

Kathe Koja’s strange horror novel The Cipher (1991) is a peculiar genre fiction that immediately attracts the attention of both horror connoisseurs and philosophers alike. It is at once a visceral, psychological horror and a theoretically intriguing dilemma. It follows the fascinating and horrific events that transpire after a disc of pure nothingness opens up in the protagonist’s home, consuming the lives of the characters just as it does the plot. This non-object pushes readers to discern its peculiar ontology but yields, as one would expect, nothing. This essay reads The Cipher through Martin Heidegger’s equally unorthodox version of the nothing (das Nichts), demonstrating how Heideggerian metaphysical thought can help to illuminate the novel’s strange nothingness, and how Koja’s novel can help us to see the horror inherent in Heidegger’s philosophy. It suggests that horror may be found not in the nihilistic lack of meaning but in our “imprisonment” in meaning.

References

Arnzen, Michael. 1995. “Behold the Funhole’: Post-Structuralist Theory and Kathe Koja's The Cipher.” Paradoxa 1.3: 342-251.

Cioran, E. M. 2012. A Short History of Decay. Translated by Richard Howard. Arcade Publishing.

Heidegger, Martin. 1962. Being and Time. Translated by John Macquarrie & Edward Robinson. Harper & Row.

Heidegger, Martin. 2008. “What is Metaphysics?” In Basic Writings, edited by David Krell, 89-111. Harper Collins.

Heidegger, Martin. 2013. The Basic Problems of Phenomenology. Translated by Scott M Campbell. Bloomsbury Academic.

Koja, Kathe. 2012. Author’s note to The Cipher. Kindle e-book.

Koja, Kathe. 2020. The Cipher. Meerkat Press.

Krell, David. 2008. Introduction to “What is Metaphysics” in Basic Writings, edited by David Krell. Harper Collins.

Meijer, Maryse. 2020. Afterword to The Cipher, 217-220. Meerkat Press.

Nietzsche, Friedrich. 1968. The Will to Power. Edited by Walter Kaufmann. Translated by Walter Kaufmann and R.J. Hollingdale. Vintage Books.

Shaviro, Steven. 2016. “Into the Funhole: Kathe Koja’s The Cipher.” Genre 49.2: 213-229.

Sheehan, Thomas. 2015. Making Sense of Heidegger: A Paradigm Shift. Rowman and Littlefield.

Withy, Katherine. 2015. Heidegger on Being Uncanny. Harvard University Press.

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Published

2024-10-11

How to Cite

Sell, Alexander. 2024. “Everything and Nothing: The Horror of Meaning in The Cipher”. Imagining the Impossible: International Journal for the Fantastic in Contemporary Media, October. https://doi.org/10.7146/imaginingtheimpossible.145604.

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