Violence, Memory, and History: Geoffrey of Monmouth and Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
J. Brent
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Kazuo Ishiguro has suggested that his work of medieval fantasy, The Buried Giant (2015), draws on a “quasi-historical” King Arthur, in contrast to the Arthur of legend. This article reads Ishiguro’s novel against the medieval work that codified the notion of an historical King Arthur, Geoffrey of Monmouth’s History of the Kings of Britain (c. 1139). Geoffrey’s History offered a largely fictive account of the British past that became the most successful historiographical phenomenon of the English Middle Ages. The Buried Giant offers an interrogation of memory that calls such “useful” constructions of history into question. The novel deploys material deriving from Geoffrey’s work while laying bear its methodology; the two texts speak to each other in ways sometimes complementary, sometimes deconstructive. That Ishiguro’s critique can be applied to Geoffrey’s History points to recurrent strategies of history-making, past and present, whereby violence serves as a mechanism for the creation of historical form.
暴力、记忆和历史:蒙茅斯的杰弗里和石黑一雄的《被埋葬的巨人》
石黑一雄表示,他的中世纪幻想作品《被埋葬的巨人》(2015)借鉴了“准历史”的亚瑟王,与传说中的亚瑟王形成鲜明对比。这篇文章阅读了石黑一雄的小说,反对中世纪编纂历史上的亚瑟王概念的作品,蒙茅斯的杰弗里的《英国国王史》(约1139年)。杰弗里的《历史》在很大程度上虚构了英国的过去,成为英国中世纪最成功的史学现象。《被埋葬的巨人》提供了一个对记忆的审问,让这种“有用”的历史建构受到质疑。这部小说运用了杰弗里作品中的素材,同时承载了其方法论;这两个文本以一种有时互补,有时解构的方式相互对话。石黑一雄的批判可以应用于杰弗里的《历史》,这表明了历史创造的反复策略,无论是过去还是现在,暴力都是创造历史形式的机制。
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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CiteScore
0.40
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37
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