Genre Communities: Against a National Teleology of Literature

IF 0.4 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Mushtaq Bilal
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Abstract

abstract:As long as the study of literature is organized along national lines, scholars cannot decenter global literary history. Merely shifting the focus from major/core literatures to minor/peripheral ones does not decenter anything for such a move preserves the centrality of nation as the only kind of community in which a literary work can become legible. This article argues against a national teleology of literature in which we project the category of nation back in historical time. Instead, it proposes to look at literary history in terms of genre communities—communities that commune around a literary genre (e.g., a novel community, ghazal community). With the help of a nineteenth-century Urdu novel, Nazir Ahmad's Mirāt ul-'Urūs (1869) (The Bride's Mirror), this article shows how a national teleology that gets imposed retrospectively has led scholars of Urdu literature to assume that the novel gives expression to the concerns of reforming a Muslim nation. However, what emerges in and through Nazir Ahmad's novel is not a Muslim nation but a novel community of the ashrāf (singular sharīf; literally, exalted, noble, honorable). This novel community is organized around the economy of sharaf (honor) and not Islam.
流派共同体:反对一种民族文学目的论
只要文学研究是按照国家的路线来组织的,学者们就不可能分散全球文学史的注意力。仅仅将重点从主要/核心文学转移到次要/边缘文学并不能分散任何注意力,因为这样的举动保留了国家的中心地位,因为国家是文学作品唯一可以清晰阅读的群体。本文反对一种文学的民族目的论,在这种文学中,我们将民族的范畴投射到历史时期。相反,它建议从流派社区的角度来看待文学史——围绕文学流派的社区(例如,小说社区、加扎尔社区)。借助19世纪的乌尔都语小说,纳齐尔·艾哈迈德的《新娘的镜子》(1869),本文展示了一种被追溯强加的民族目的论是如何导致乌尔都语文学学者认为这部小说表达了改革穆斯林国家的担忧的。然而,纳齐尔·艾哈迈德的小说中和小说中出现的不是一个穆斯林国家,而是一个ashrāf(单数sharīf;字面意思是崇高、高尚、光荣)的小说社区。这个新颖的社区是围绕着伊斯兰教(荣誉)而非伊斯兰教的经济组织的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Comparative Literature Studies publishes comparative articles in literature and culture, critical theory, and cultural and literary relations within and beyond the Western tradition. It brings you the work of eminent critics, scholars, theorists, and literary historians, whose essays range across the rich traditions of Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas. One of its regular issues every two years concerns East-West literary and cultural relations and is edited in conjunction with members of the College of International Relations at Nihon University. Each issue includes reviews of significant books by prominent comparatists.
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