Breaking the Peace:

Saskia McCracken
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Abstract

This chapter examines Woolf’s feminist, pacifist, and anti-fascist engagement with Darwin’s work on dictators through the trope of the worm, suggesting how we might we read both Woolf and Darwin through the lens of animal studies. McCracken reads Woolf’s ‘creature Dictator’ and related worm imagery back through Charles Darwin’s writings both on worms and on nineteenth-century Argentinian Dictator General Juan Manuel de Rosas, whom he met during his voyage on the HMS Beagle. According to Darwin, Rosas led a ‘war of extermination’ against indigenous peoples, yet ‘disapproved of peace having been broken’. This chapter argues that Woolf re-appropriates the Social Darwinist rhetoric of the 1930s, and twists animal imagery to feminist advantage.  The chapter also analyses Woolf’s silkworm and related mulberry tree imagery in Three Guineas through Darwin’s interest in breeding silkworms. Placing this imagery in the context of 1930s social Darwinist silk production discourse under the Third Reich, McCracken, argues that, contrary to critics who read her silkworm as symbolic of female creativity, Woolf’s writing intimately connects Darwinian silkworm breeding imagery and fascist politics.
打破和平:
这一章考察了伍尔夫的女权主义者、和平主义者和反法西斯主义者通过蠕虫的比喻与达尔文关于独裁者的作品的联系,建议我们如何通过动物研究的镜头来阅读伍尔夫和达尔文。麦克拉肯读了伍尔夫的“生物独裁者”,并通过查尔斯·达尔文关于蠕虫的著作和19世纪阿根廷独裁者胡安·曼努埃尔·德·罗萨斯将军(他在英国皇家海军贝格尔号上航行时遇到了罗萨斯将军)阅读了有关蠕虫的意象。根据达尔文的说法,罗萨斯领导了一场针对土著人民的“灭绝战争”,但他“不赞成和平被打破”。本章认为,伍尔夫重新挪用了20世纪30年代的社会达尔文主义修辞,并扭曲了动物形象,以有利于女权主义。本章还通过达尔文对养蚕的兴趣分析了伍尔夫的蚕和《三基尼》中有关桑树的意象。麦克拉根将这一意象置于20世纪30年代第三帝国统治下的社会达尔文主义丝绸生产话语的背景下,他认为,与将伍尔夫的蚕视为女性创造力象征的批评者相反,伍尔夫的作品将达尔文主义的蚕养殖意象与法西斯政治密切联系在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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