Moscow Metro as the Leviathan: Corporeal and Political Infections

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, SLAVIC
Richard Boyechko
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Since it was published, Dmitry Glukhovsky’s novel Metro 2033 (2005), in addition to sequels and other novels, has also jumped across media boundaries to spawn comic books and video games. The story takes place following a nuclear holocaust which has left Earth’s surface uninhabitable, condemning some survivors to eke out a life underground in the subway network. The novel’s basic narrative concerns this last haven, imagined as a giant organism, being invaded by “чёрные” (“blacks” or “black ones”), the homo novus better adapted to life on the harsh planet. In this paper, I argue that Glukhovsky subverts this corporeal metaphor to call attention to the troubling implications of, on one hand, the militaristic description of the immune system, and on the other, national security imagined in immunological terms. At the same time, the viral logic of contagion also allows us to glimpse the central tenet of ecological thought, that “all beings are connected,” or as Donna Haraway likewise reminds us, that we are always already infected through our relations with human and non-human others. It is only when we allow for such mutual contagions that we have any hope of confronting the dire consequences of our technological progress.

作为利维坦的莫斯科地铁:肉体和政治感染
自出版以来,德米特里·格鲁克霍夫斯基的小说《地铁2033》(2005),除了续集和其他小说之外,还跨越了媒体的界限,催生了漫画书和电子游戏。故事发生在一场核灾难之后,这场灾难使地球表面无法居住,一些幸存者被迫在地下的地铁网络中勉强度日。小说的基本叙事是关于这个最后的避难所,想象成一个巨大的有机体,被“чёрные”(“黑人”或“黑人”)入侵,这些新人类更能适应这个严酷的星球上的生活。在这篇论文中,我认为格卢霍夫斯基颠覆了这种身体隐喻,一方面唤起人们对免疫系统的军国主义描述的关注,另一方面,用免疫学术语想象的国家安全。与此同时,传染的病毒逻辑也让我们瞥见了生态思想的核心原则,即“所有生物都是相连的”,或者正如唐娜·哈拉威(Donna Haraway)同样提醒我们的那样,通过与人类和非人类的关系,我们总是已经被感染了。只有当我们允许这种相互传染时,我们才有希望面对技术进步的可怕后果。
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来源期刊
RUSSIAN LITERATURE
RUSSIAN LITERATURE LITERATURE, SLAVIC-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
50
期刊介绍: Russian Literature combines issues devoted to special topics of Russian literature with contributions on related subjects in Croatian, Serbian, Czech, Slovak and Polish literatures. Moreover, several issues each year contain articles on heterogeneous subjects concerning Russian Literature. All methods and viewpoints are welcomed, provided they contribute something new, original or challenging to our understanding of Russian and other Slavic literatures. Russian Literature regularly publishes special issues devoted to: • the historical avant-garde in Russian literature and in the other Slavic literatures • the development of descriptive and theoretical poetics in Russian studies and in studies of other Slavic fields.
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