{"title":"Urban Places and the Narrative of the Supreme Power","authors":"Marisa Kerbizi","doi":"10.59045/nalans.2023.28","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"During the totalitarian era (1944–1991), urban space was used as an “arena” in which to demonstrate the absolute power of the communist regime. Some important structures were built; others were destroyed; new names were given to streets or even cities, to create a new identity for the urban areas. Urban locations (the Pyramid of Enver Hoxha, the Dajti hotel, the building of the Central Committee, etc.), became symbols of fear and admiration, because of their strong association with the supreme political power. Contemporary novels such as Ferri i çarë (The Hell is Broken), Në kohën e britmës (In the Time of the Scream) by Visar Zhiti, The Successor, The Daughter of Agamemnon by Ismail Kadare, Loja, shembja e qiellit (The Game, the Fall of the Sky), etc., make urban places the epicenter of a dramatic relationship between man and the totalitarian power. The main goal of this paper is to analyze the correlation between transformations that happened in urban spaces during the communist era (1945–1990) and the implementation of the ideological project of the “New Man”. A thorough text analysis of Albanian novels is used to interpret the re-designation of the cities, as part of a political program, by which urban landscapes, literature, and art were transformed into mere ideological means through which the communist new word was proclaimed. These transformations became symbolic signs of a tragic time, where man became God (in the new atheist context), and the urban space became the temple, and where fear and obedience were sowed together with fake narratives related to urban identity.","PeriodicalId":36955,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Narrative and Language Studies","volume":"2 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Narrative and Language Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.59045/nalans.2023.28","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
During the totalitarian era (1944–1991), urban space was used as an “arena” in which to demonstrate the absolute power of the communist regime. Some important structures were built; others were destroyed; new names were given to streets or even cities, to create a new identity for the urban areas. Urban locations (the Pyramid of Enver Hoxha, the Dajti hotel, the building of the Central Committee, etc.), became symbols of fear and admiration, because of their strong association with the supreme political power. Contemporary novels such as Ferri i çarë (The Hell is Broken), Në kohën e britmës (In the Time of the Scream) by Visar Zhiti, The Successor, The Daughter of Agamemnon by Ismail Kadare, Loja, shembja e qiellit (The Game, the Fall of the Sky), etc., make urban places the epicenter of a dramatic relationship between man and the totalitarian power. The main goal of this paper is to analyze the correlation between transformations that happened in urban spaces during the communist era (1945–1990) and the implementation of the ideological project of the “New Man”. A thorough text analysis of Albanian novels is used to interpret the re-designation of the cities, as part of a political program, by which urban landscapes, literature, and art were transformed into mere ideological means through which the communist new word was proclaimed. These transformations became symbolic signs of a tragic time, where man became God (in the new atheist context), and the urban space became the temple, and where fear and obedience were sowed together with fake narratives related to urban identity.
在极权主义时代(1944-1991),城市空间被用作展示共产主义政权绝对权力的“竞技场”。建造了一些重要的建筑物;其他人被摧毁;街道甚至城市都被赋予了新的名字,为城市地区创造了新的身份。城市地点(Enver Hoxha金字塔、Dajti酒店、中央委员会大楼等)成为恐惧和钦佩的象征,因为它们与最高政治权力有很强的联系。维萨·齐提的《地狱破裂》çarë、《呐喊的时代》Në kohën e britmës、伊斯梅尔·卡达雷的《继承者》、《阿伽门农的女儿》、《游戏》、《天空的坠落》等当代小说将城市场所变成了人与极权主义权力之间戏剧性关系的中心。本文的主要目的是分析共产主义时代(1945-1990)城市空间发生的变化与“新人”意识形态项目的实施之间的相关性。通过对阿尔巴尼亚小说的全面文本分析来解释城市的重新命名,作为政治计划的一部分,城市景观,文学和艺术被转变为纯粹的意识形态手段,通过这种方式,共产主义的新词被宣布。这些转变成为一个悲剧时代的象征性标志,在那里,人成为了上帝(在新的无神论背景下),城市空间成为了寺庙,在那里,恐惧和服从与与城市身份相关的虚假叙事一起被播种。