A Love Letter to Europa: Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer’s Grand Hotel Europa
Journal
Interface --Journal for European Languages and Literatures
Journal Volume
20
Start Page
123
End Page
155
ISSN
2519-1268
Date Issued
2023-03
Author(s)
Abstract
In this article I review Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer’s 2018 novel Grand Hotel Europa in order to explore the themes of hospitality, tourism, and European cultural identity. I argue that Pfeijffer masterfully intermixes multiple plots to make palpable the current (though pre-COVID) crisis in Europe, that is, the refugee crisis since 2015 and the on-going transformation of (Western) Europe’s capitals because of mass tourism. Following Pfeijffer’s lead, I review some work on hospitality and the legacy of the European Enlightenment by such writers as Jacques Derrida, Jürgen Habermas, and Aleida Assmann to draw some conclusions about European cultural identity. The tradition of European hospitality links the contemporary migrant and tourist in a general problematic that challengingly tests European identity. While a “thick,” positive Judeo-Christian tradition can no longer be assumed as constituting the identity of Europe, the learning processes of the 20th century bring forward the unfinished European project of Modernity and contribute to an identity around which solidarity can be forged today. I argue that Pfeijffer’s novel is a valuable contribution to thinking through these issues of pressing contemporary interest, and a successful example of what a new, European artwork can be.
Publisher
Interface --Journal of European Languages and Literatures
Type
journal article
