“Le modèle bizarre qu’il devenait pour eux”: the ocean as a model for contemporary masculine (inter)subjectivities in Plus rien que les vagues et le vent (2014) by Christine Montalbetti
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article examines Christine Montalbetti’s novel Plus rien que les vagues et le vent (2014) (Nothing but Waves and Wind, 2017) to propose the ocean as a model to think about contemporary masculinities. This French road novel depicts homosociality in the post-2008 American landscape through the perspective of an outsider homodiegetic narrator. The ocean serves as a narrative model for the novel: its bodily connection with the characters embodies “hybrid masculinities” that emerge from a hybridity of patterns in an ongoing process of negotiation, appropriation and reformulation. In their travels, the characters eventually meet the ocean and testify to a fluid ontology that overturns the Modern detachment from the environment together with its humanist conception of “Man.” The ocean’s waves suggest a nonlinear timeline and an ongoing posthumanist reformation of subjectivities, like the ever-reshaping shorelines. In Montalbetti’s novel, the ocean as a model for hybrid masculinities accounts for novel forms of power relationships, where radical openness pairs with violence.
"Le modèle bizarre qu'il devenait pour eux":Christine Montalbetti 所著 Plus rien que les vagues et le vent(2014 年)中海洋作为当代男性(间)主体性的模型
本文通过研究克里斯蒂娜-蒙塔尔贝蒂的小说《除了海浪和风,什么都没有》(Plus rien que les vagues et le vent,2014)(《除了海浪和风,什么都没有》,2017),提出以海洋作为思考当代男性气质的范本。这部法国公路小说通过一个外来的同人叙述者的视角,描绘了2008年后美国景观中的同人社会性。海洋是小说的叙事模式:海洋与小说人物的身体联系体现了 "混合男性气质",这种气质是在不断的协商、挪用和重新表述过程中从混合模式中产生的。在旅行过程中,主人公们最终与海洋相遇,见证了一种流动的本体论,颠覆了现代人与环境的分离及其对 "人 "的人文主义概念。海洋的波浪暗示着非线性的时间轴,以及后人文主义对主体性的不断改造,就像不断刷新的海岸线一样。在蒙塔尔贝蒂的小说中,海洋作为混合男性气质的典范,体现了新形式的权力关系,其中激进的开放性与暴力并存。
期刊介绍:
Subjectivity is an international, transdisciplinary journal examining the social, cultural, historical and material processes, dynamics and structures of human experience. As topic, problem and resource, notions of subjectivity are relevant to many disciplines, including cultural studies, sociology, social theory, geography, anthropology and psychology. The journal brings together scholars from across the social sciences and the humanities, publishing high-quality theoretical and empirical papers that address the processes by which subjectivities are produced, explore subjectivity as a locus of social change, and examine how emerging subjectivities remake our social worlds.