Can the “Mutelated” Subaltern be Free? Reading Friday’s Subversion in J. M. Coetzee’s Foe

Hemangi Hemangi, Tanya D’souza
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Abstract

J. M. Coetzee’s 1986 novel Foe tells the story of Susan Barton, who has boarded a ship bound for Lisbon in her search for her kidnapped daughter. After a mutiny on the ship she is set adrift, washing ashore on the island inhabited by “Cruso” and Friday and intruding into their ongoing adventure. Her account is then inserted into the original Robinson Crusoe story line, which is redrawn following Susan Barton’s perspective. The original text’s recontextualization illustrates the effort by Coetzee to render the story in categories that are relevant to a contemporary cultural context. Like Robinson Crusoe, it is a frame story, developed while Barton is in England attempting to convince writer Daniel Foe to help transform her tale into popular fiction. Friday is a character whose marginality – as it first appears in Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe – is carried forward in J. M. Coetzee’s Foe, as this new version of Friday is that of a more disempowered and dysfunctional subject, one doubly mutilated – orally and sexually. This paper aims to study Friday’s subversive subalternity in Coetzee’s work by using postcolonial methodology with a view to uncover his unique, rebellious behaviour and his capacity to define his own modes of freedom.
“变异”的下级能自由吗?在j·m·库切的《敌人》中阅读周五的颠覆
j·m·库切1986年的小说《敌人》讲述了苏珊·巴顿登上一艘开往里斯本的船去寻找被绑架的女儿的故事。在船上发生叛变后,她被漂流,在岛上被“克鲁索”和星期五居住,并闯入他们正在进行的冒险。她的叙述随后被插入到原《鲁滨逊漂流记》的故事线中,而原故事线是按照苏珊·巴顿的视角重新绘制的。原文的重新语境化说明了库切努力将故事呈现在与当代文化背景相关的类别中。和《鲁滨逊漂流记》一样,这是一个框架故事,巴顿在英国试图说服作家丹尼尔·福帮忙把她的故事改编成通俗小说。星期五这个角色的边缘性——在丹尼尔·笛福的《鲁滨逊漂流记》中首次出现——在j·m·库切的《敌人》中得到了延续,因为这个新版本的星期五是一个更被剥夺权力和功能失调的主体,一个在口头和性方面双重残缺的人。本文旨在运用后殖民方法论研究库切作品中星期五的颠覆性次等性,以期揭示他独特的叛逆行为和他定义自己的自由模式的能力。
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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