Embodying Violence: The Case of Cormac McCarthy

B. Evenson
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

These are the remarks of Brian Evenson, who gave the keynote address at the recent conference "Fifty Years of Cormac McCarthy." The conference was held at the University of Memphis in October 2015 and celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of McCarthy's first novel, The Orchard Keeper.It's a pleasure for me to be here, speaking to you about Cormac McCarthy, one of my favorite writers. I was privileged enough to come, while still a graduate student, to the first Cormac McCarthy conference at Bellarmine College more than twenty years ago (and indeed have been to several McCarthy conferences since). I felt at the time I was watching the start of something genuinely significant. I'm pleased to be back here today to see the fruits of that beginning, to see how developed the scholarship on McCarthy now is, and to celebrate fifty years of Cormac McCarthy. It has been a joy to hear the papers delivered so far, and to be thrown again deeply into the world of McCarthy, a world which, despite its darkness, is so beautifully rendered as to seem to me always a genuine pleasure to read.I am going to talk about McCarthy's fiction and in particular the palpability of that fiction, the way that it seems almost tangible in a fashion that the fiction of very few writers do. I am going to speak, among other things, about embodied and disembodied violence in McCarthy's work, how McCarthy, even when he is ultimately on the way to a potentially redemptive or hopeful moment, passes- sometimes quite literally, even graphically-through bodies. Since I'm a writer, I'm going to try, too, to discuss McCarthy's style in relation to the embodied, palpable quality of his work. This is all a way, ultimately, of trying to determine why it is that McCarthy's work has such staying power, and why we still gather to talk about him a half-century after he first began to publish.I'm going to start, no doubt to the surprise of most of you-particularly those of you who know I'm a former Mormon-with a quotation from early Mormon Church leader Brigham Young. "And inasmuch as the Lord Almighty has designed us to know all that is in the earth, both the good and the evil, and to learn not only what is in heaven, but what is in hell, you need not expect ever to get through learning. Though I mean to learn all that is in heaven, earth, and hell" (Young 94).One of the reasons that I quote this is because it sounds a little bit like something Judge Holden might say. But the larger reason is the expansiveness of the idea, the idea that everything is worthy of attention, whether it be in heaven, earth, or hell. For me, that broad curiosity, that embrace of heaven and earth and hell and all points between, is what characterizes McCarthy's work-though his embrace of heaven strikes me as the most tenuous of the three. He is curious about everything, interested in even the most hellish landscapes. He is intrigued by the down and out and the suffering of those existing along the edges of society, intrigued too by those that flutter on the edge of social structures and sometimes stumble off. He offers us worlds that have the flexibility to contain, at least for a while, both Chigurh, who seems a denizen from a deterministic hell, and Sheriff Ed Tom Bell, who we might describe, borrowing from another McCarthy novel, as a "child of God much like yourself perhaps" (4). McCarthy, like Dostoevsky, allows the ideas and philosophies of different modes of inhabiting the world to play themselves out dramatically in the form of fully drawn characters with coherent ideologies.The Crossing has an ex-Mormon character in it-actually an ex-Mormon turned Catholic, turned heretic-and now that I've quoted from Brigham Young, I feel I should take a page from McCarthy and be expansive enough to offer that view too. Says the ex-Mormon: "Things separate from their stories have no meaning. They are only shapes. Of a certain size and color. A certain weight. …
暴力的体现:科马克·麦卡锡的案例
这是Brian Evenson的评论,他在最近的“科马克·麦卡锡50年”会议上发表了主题演讲。会议于2015年10月在孟菲斯大学举行,以庆祝麦卡锡的第一部小说《果园看守人》出版五十周年。很高兴来到这里,向大家介绍科马克·麦卡锡,我最喜欢的作家之一。二十多年前,当我还是研究生的时候,我有幸参加了贝拉明学院(Bellarmine College)的第一届科马克·麦卡锡(Cormac McCarthy)会议(从那以后,我确实参加了几次麦卡锡会议)。我当时觉得,我正在见证一件真正意义重大的事情的开始。今天,我很高兴回到这里,看到这一开端的成果,看到关于麦卡锡的学术研究发展到什么程度,并庆祝科马克·麦卡锡诞辰50周年。听到报纸送到这里来,我感到很高兴,我又一次深入到麦卡锡的世界里去了。麦卡锡的世界,尽管黑暗,却呈现得如此美丽,读起来总是一种真正的乐趣。我要讲的是麦卡锡的小说,尤其是他的小说的可感知性,他的小说几乎是有形的,很少有作家的小说能做到这一点。除了其他内容外,我还将谈到麦卡锡作品中具象和非具象的暴力,以及麦卡锡是如何在最终走向潜在的救赎或希望的时刻时,通过身体——有时是相当字面的,甚至是图形化的——传递的。既然我是一名作家,我也要试着讨论麦卡锡的风格与他作品中体现出来的、显而易见的品质之间的关系。最终,这一切都是为了试图确定为什么麦卡锡的作品具有如此持久的影响力,以及为什么在他首次出版半个世纪之后,我们仍然聚集在一起谈论他。毫无疑问,让你们大多数人——尤其是那些知道我曾经是摩门教徒的人——感到惊讶的是,我要以早期摩门教领袖杨百翰的话作为开始。“既然万能之主已经安排我们认识世间的一切,包括善的和恶的,不仅学习天堂里的东西,而且还学习地狱里的东西,你就不要指望永远都能通过学习。尽管我打算学习天堂、人间和地狱的一切”(Young 94)。我引用这句话的原因之一是因为这听起来有点像霍尔顿法官可能会说的话。但更重要的原因是这种观念的广泛性,这种观念认为一切都值得关注,无论是在天堂、地球还是地狱。对我来说,那种广泛的好奇心,那种对天堂、人间、地狱以及两者之间所有点的拥抱,正是麦卡锡作品的特点——尽管他对天堂的拥抱在我看来是三者中最脆弱的。他对一切都很好奇,甚至对最可怕的风景也很感兴趣。他对那些生活在社会边缘的落魄者和受苦者很感兴趣,也对那些在社会结构边缘摇摆不定、有时会跌倒的人很感兴趣。他为我们提供了一个灵活的世界,至少在一段时间内,可以容纳齐格和埃德·汤姆·贝尔警长,齐格似乎是一个来自确定性地狱的居民,而埃德·汤姆·贝尔警长,我们可以把他描述为“上帝的孩子,也许和你自己很像”(借用麦卡锡的另一部小说)。麦卡锡和陀思妥耶夫斯基一样,允许不同模式的思想和哲学以具有连贯意识形态的完整人物的形式戏剧性地发挥出来。《十字路口》中有一个前摩门教徒的角色——实际上是一个从摩门教徒变成天主教徒,变成异教徒——现在我引用了杨百翰的话,我觉得我应该借鉴麦卡锡的观点,也要有足够的扩展来提供这个观点。这位前摩门教徒说:“脱离他们的故事的事情没有意义。它们只是形状。有一定大小和颜色的。一定的重量。…
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