https://www.atlantisjournal.org/index.php/atlantis/article/view/679

Beatriz Pérez Zapata
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Abstract

This article examines the role of intertextuality in Zadie Smith’s NW (2012) and the novel’s questioning of authorship, authenticity and identity. Relying on intertextual and postcolonial theories, the article lays bare how Smith’s novel questions the fixity and stability of selves and how she situates herself as an inherently intertextual author disrupted by others and potentially disruptive of (post)colonial ways of being and one that plays with notions of (in)authenticity and originality. For this purpose, the article pays attention to the novel’sintertextual links with the historical case of the Tichborne claimant and Jorge Luis Borges’s fictionalisation of it in the short story “Tom Castro, the Implausible Impostor,” included in the collection A Universal History of Infamy (1933). Moreover, the article focuses on the theorisation of infamy, understood as the disruption of hegemonic narratives brought about by marginal characters and discourses.
https://www.atlantisjournal.org/index.php/atlantis/article/view/679
本文考察了互文性在扎迪·史密斯的《西北》(2012)中的作用,以及小说对作者身份、真实性和身份的质疑。依托互文和后殖民理论,本文揭示了史密斯的小说如何质疑自我的固定性和稳定性,以及她如何将自己定位为一个天生的互文作者,被他人扰乱,潜在地破坏(后)殖民的存在方式,以及一个玩弄(内)真实性和原创性概念的人。为此,本文关注了小说与蒂奇本索赔者的历史案例的互文联系,以及豪尔赫·路易斯·博尔赫斯在短篇小说《汤姆·卡斯特罗,难以置信的骗子》中对它的虚构化,该故事收录在《世界耻辱史》(1933年)中。此外,本文还着重讨论了恶名的理论化,将其理解为边缘人物和话语对霸权叙事的破坏。
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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