‘How Much of Nothing There Was’: Trying (Not) to Understand Elizabeth Bowen

Damian Tarnopolsky
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Abstract

This chapter notes that one of the strangest aspects of Bowen’s novels of the 1930s and 1940s is the prevalence of nothing in these texts. Examples range from sentences including double or triple negatives and words that cancel themselves out, to descriptions of parts of London destroyed by the Blitz, to scenes built around something missing. Her characters complain that they know nothing about each other or their own motives; her plots often resist final explanation, as if the novels are in some sense about nothing. On every page, in sentences, in her characters’ lives, in her sense of the world, Bowen’s novels pursue a paradoxical task: charting the presence of lack, absence and negativity. The chapter argues that Bowen’s obsessive dealing with nothingness is a clue to her sense of her place and time. Exploring Bowen’s ‘nothings’ is a way of understanding the fractured historical moment in which she wrote, and her response to it; it is also a way of placing her responses to late and high modernism, to world history and literary history.
《一无所有》:试着(不)理解伊丽莎白·鲍恩
本章指出,鲍恩在20世纪30年代和40年代的小说中最奇怪的一个方面是,这些文本中普遍存在着“无”。这些例子包括双重否定或三重否定的句子和自我抵消的单词,对伦敦被闪电战摧毁的部分的描述,以及围绕丢失的东西建造的场景。她笔下的人物抱怨说,他们对彼此一无所知,也不了解自己的动机;她的故事情节往往无法得到最后的解释,就好像她的小说在某种意义上什么都没有。在每一页、每一个句子、每一个人物的生活、每一个她的世界观中,鲍文的小说都在追求一个矛盾的任务:描绘缺乏、缺失和消极的存在。这一章认为,鲍恩对虚无的痴迷是她对自己的地点和时间的感知的线索。探索鲍文的“虚无”是一种理解她写作时支离破碎的历史时刻以及她对此的回应的方式;这也是她对晚期和晚期现代主义,对世界历史和文学史的回应。
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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