Glenway Wescott's Narratives of Queer Drift

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Patrick Kindig
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This essay argues that Glenway Wescott—an American author widely read in the early twentieth century but virtually unknown to literary scholars today—poses a problem for many of the narratives we tell ourselves about both queer identity and modernist literary history. On the one hand, the wandering, nonlinear plots of much of his fiction run counter to the narratives of urban migration, rural stasis, and ex-urban return that shape most scholarship on sexual geography. On the other, Wescott's tendency to borrow aesthetic practices from a wide range of literary schools and movements makes it difficult to locate him within the narrative of American literary history. Reading Wescott's writings—particularly those in his short story collection Good-Bye Wisconsin (1928)—as examples of what the essay terms queer drift, the author argues that Wescott's life and corpus destabilize the narratives we often use to make sense of both modern sexual identity and modernist literary aesthetics. In fact, this is why his work warrants more critical attention than it has traditionally received: it provides us with new ways of thinking about the relationship between queerness, geography, and narrative form.
格伦威·威斯科特的《酷儿漂流叙事
摘要:本文认为格伦威·韦斯科特——一位在20世纪初被广泛阅读,但在今天却几乎不为文学学者所知的美国作家——给我们关于酷儿身份和现代主义文学史的许多叙述提出了一个问题。一方面,他的许多小说中漂泊的、非线性的情节与城市移民、农村停滞和城市外回归的叙事背道而驰,这些叙事塑造了大多数性别地理学的学术研究。另一方面,韦斯科特倾向于从广泛的文学流派和文学运动中借鉴美学实践,这使得他很难在美国文学史的叙事中定位。阅读威斯考特的作品——尤其是他的短篇小说集《再见,威斯康辛》(1928)中的作品——作为文章所称的酷儿漂移的例子,作者认为,威斯考特的生活和语体动摇了我们经常用来理解现代性别身份和现代主义文学美学的叙事。事实上,这就是为什么他的作品比以往更值得关注的原因:它为我们提供了思考酷儿、地理和叙事形式之间关系的新方法。
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来源期刊
Glq-A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies
Glq-A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: Providing a much-needed forum for interdisciplinary discussion, GLQ publishes scholarship, criticism, and commentary in areas as diverse as law, science studies, religion, political science, and literary studies. Its aim is to offer queer perspectives on all issues touching on sex and sexuality. In an effort to achieve the widest possible historical, geographic, and cultural scope, GLQ particularly seeks out new research into historical periods before the twentieth century, into non-Anglophone cultures, and into the experience of those who have been marginalized by race, ethnicity, age, social class, body morphology, or sexual practice.
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