Unzuverlässiges Erzählen als werkübergreifende Kategorie. Personale und impersonale Erzählinstanzen im phantastischen Kriminalroman

IF 0.6 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
Sonja Klimek
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Detective stories, in contrast, are usually set in a purely realistic world (in conflict with no other reality system) and typically do not foster any doubts regarding the reliability of their narrators. The only unreliable narrators we frequently meet in most detective stories are suspects who, in second level narrations, tell lies in order to misdirect the detective’s enquiries. Their untruthfulness is usually being uncovered at the end of the story, in the final resolution of the criminalistics riddle (›Whodunnit‹?), as part of the genre-typical ›narrative closure‹. As the new genre of detective novels emerged at the turn from the 19th to the 20th century, its specific genre conventions got more and more well-established. This made it possible for writers to playfully change some of these readers’ genre expectations – in order to better fulfil others. Agatha Christie, for example, in 1926 dared to undermine the »principle of charity« (Walton) that readers give to the reliability of first person narrators in detective stories – especially when such a narrator shows himself as being a close friend to the detective at work, as it was the case with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous Dr. Watson, friend to Sherlock Holmes. Christie dared to break this principle by establishing a first-person narrator who, at the end, turns out to be the murderer himself. Thus, she evades the »principle of charity«, but is not being penalised by readers and critics for having broken this one genre convention because she achieves a very astonishing resolution at the end of the case and thus reaches to fulfil another and even more crucial genre convention, that of a surprising ›narrative closure‹, in a very new and satisfying way. Fantastic literature and detective novels are usually two clearly distinct genres of narrative fiction with partly incommensurate genre conventions. Whereas in fantastic literature (in the narrower sense of the term), two reality systems collide, leaving the reader in uncertainty about which one of the two finally rules within the fictive world, detective novels usually are settled in a ›simply realistic‹ universe. Taking a closer look at a contemporary series of detective fiction, that is, the Dublin stories of Tana French (2007–), I will turn to an example in which the genre convention of ›intraserial coherence‹ provides evidence for the unreliability of the different narrators – whereas with regard only to each single volume of the series, each narrator could be perceived as being completely reliable. As soon as we have several narrators telling stories that take place within the same fictive world, unreliable narration can result from inconsistencies between the statements of the different narrators about what is fictionally true within this universe. Additionally, the Tana French example is of special interest for narratology because in one of the volumes, an impersonal and seemingly omniscient narrator appears. Omniscient narration is usually being regarded as incompatible with unreliability, but, as Janine Jacke has already shown, in fact is not: Also impersonal narration can mire in contradictions and thus turn out to be unreliable. With regard to Tana French’s novel, I would add that it can also be mistrusted because the utterances of this narration can conflict with those of other narrators in other volumes of the same series. So in the light of serial narration, the old question of whether impersonal narration (or an omniscient narrator) can be unreliable at all should be reconsidered. In the case of narrative seriality, the evidence for ascribing unreliability to one of its alternating narrators need not be found in the particular sequel narrated by her/him but in other sequels narrating about events within the same story world. Once again, narrative unreliability turns out to be a category rather of interpretation than of pure text analysis and description. Again, Tana French like previously Agatha Christie is not being penalised by readers and critics for having broken this one genre convention of letting her detective stories take place in a purely ›realistic‹ universe because today, genre conventions are merging more and more. Tana French achieves an even more tempting ›narrative tension‹ by keeping her readers in continuous uncertainty about whether a little bit of magic might be possible in the otherwise so quotidian world of her fictive detectives. Thus, the author metafictionally (and, later also overtly) flirts with the genre of »urban fantasy«, practicing a typical postmodern merging of well-established, hitherto distinct popular genres.","PeriodicalId":42872,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Literary Theory","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2018-06-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1515/jlt-2018-0003","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Literary Theory","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1515/jlt-2018-0003","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract This paper explores why unreliable narration should be considered as a concept not only applying to single works of fiction, but also to whole series of fiction, and why impersonal (›omniscient‹) narration can also be suspected of unreliability. Some literary genres show a great affinity to unreliable narration. In fantastic literature (in the narrower sense of the term), for instance, the reader’s »hesitation« towards which reality system rules within the fictive world often is due to the narration of an autodiegetic narrator whose credibility is not beyond doubt. Detective stories, in contrast, are usually set in a purely realistic world (in conflict with no other reality system) and typically do not foster any doubts regarding the reliability of their narrators. The only unreliable narrators we frequently meet in most detective stories are suspects who, in second level narrations, tell lies in order to misdirect the detective’s enquiries. Their untruthfulness is usually being uncovered at the end of the story, in the final resolution of the criminalistics riddle (›Whodunnit‹?), as part of the genre-typical ›narrative closure‹. As the new genre of detective novels emerged at the turn from the 19th to the 20th century, its specific genre conventions got more and more well-established. This made it possible for writers to playfully change some of these readers’ genre expectations – in order to better fulfil others. Agatha Christie, for example, in 1926 dared to undermine the »principle of charity« (Walton) that readers give to the reliability of first person narrators in detective stories – especially when such a narrator shows himself as being a close friend to the detective at work, as it was the case with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous Dr. Watson, friend to Sherlock Holmes. Christie dared to break this principle by establishing a first-person narrator who, at the end, turns out to be the murderer himself. Thus, she evades the »principle of charity«, but is not being penalised by readers and critics for having broken this one genre convention because she achieves a very astonishing resolution at the end of the case and thus reaches to fulfil another and even more crucial genre convention, that of a surprising ›narrative closure‹, in a very new and satisfying way. Fantastic literature and detective novels are usually two clearly distinct genres of narrative fiction with partly incommensurate genre conventions. Whereas in fantastic literature (in the narrower sense of the term), two reality systems collide, leaving the reader in uncertainty about which one of the two finally rules within the fictive world, detective novels usually are settled in a ›simply realistic‹ universe. Taking a closer look at a contemporary series of detective fiction, that is, the Dublin stories of Tana French (2007–), I will turn to an example in which the genre convention of ›intraserial coherence‹ provides evidence for the unreliability of the different narrators – whereas with regard only to each single volume of the series, each narrator could be perceived as being completely reliable. As soon as we have several narrators telling stories that take place within the same fictive world, unreliable narration can result from inconsistencies between the statements of the different narrators about what is fictionally true within this universe. Additionally, the Tana French example is of special interest for narratology because in one of the volumes, an impersonal and seemingly omniscient narrator appears. Omniscient narration is usually being regarded as incompatible with unreliability, but, as Janine Jacke has already shown, in fact is not: Also impersonal narration can mire in contradictions and thus turn out to be unreliable. With regard to Tana French’s novel, I would add that it can also be mistrusted because the utterances of this narration can conflict with those of other narrators in other volumes of the same series. So in the light of serial narration, the old question of whether impersonal narration (or an omniscient narrator) can be unreliable at all should be reconsidered. In the case of narrative seriality, the evidence for ascribing unreliability to one of its alternating narrators need not be found in the particular sequel narrated by her/him but in other sequels narrating about events within the same story world. Once again, narrative unreliability turns out to be a category rather of interpretation than of pure text analysis and description. Again, Tana French like previously Agatha Christie is not being penalised by readers and critics for having broken this one genre convention of letting her detective stories take place in a purely ›realistic‹ universe because today, genre conventions are merging more and more. Tana French achieves an even more tempting ›narrative tension‹ by keeping her readers in continuous uncertainty about whether a little bit of magic might be possible in the otherwise so quotidian world of her fictive detectives. Thus, the author metafictionally (and, later also overtly) flirts with the genre of »urban fantasy«, practicing a typical postmodern merging of well-established, hitherto distinct popular genres.
不可靠的叙述作为一个跨作品类别。奇幻犯罪小说中的个人与非个人叙事实例
摘要本文探讨了为什么不可靠叙事不仅适用于单个小说作品,而且适用于整个系列小说,以及为什么非个人化(›全知全能)叙事也可能被怀疑是不可靠的。一些文学流派对不可靠的叙述表现出极大的亲和力。例如,在奇幻文学中(在这个术语的狭义上),读者对现实系统在虚构世界中统治的“犹豫”往往是由于一个自律叙述者的叙述,他的可信度是毋庸置疑的。相比之下,侦探故事通常设定在一个纯粹的现实世界中(与其他现实系统不冲突),通常不会对讲述者的可靠性产生任何怀疑。在大多数侦探小说中,我们经常遇到的唯一不可靠的叙述者是嫌疑人,他们在二级叙述中撒谎,以误导侦探的调查。他们的不真实性通常在故事的结尾被揭露,在犯罪之谜的最终解决中(›WhodonnitŞ?),作为典型的›叙事结束的一部分。随着19世纪至20世纪之交侦探小说这一新类型的出现,其特有的类型惯例也越来越深入人心。这使得作家有可能开玩笑地改变这些读者的一些类型期望——以便更好地满足其他读者的期望。例如,1926年,阿加莎·克里斯蒂敢于破坏“慈善原则”(沃尔顿),读者认为侦探小说中第一人称叙述者的可靠性,尤其是当这样的叙述者在工作中表现出自己是侦探的亲密朋友时,就像亚瑟·柯南·道尔爵士笔下著名的福尔摩斯的朋友华生博士一样。克里斯蒂敢于打破这一原则,建立了一个第一人称叙述者,最终证明他自己就是凶手。因此,她避开了“慈善原则”,但并没有因为打破了这一类型惯例而受到读者和评论家的惩罚,因为她在案件结束时达成了一个非常惊人的解决方案,从而以一种非常新颖和令人满意的方式实现了另一个甚至更关键的类型惯例,即令人惊讶的›叙事结束。奇幻文学和侦探小说通常是两种明显不同的叙事小说类型,其类型惯例部分不一致。在奇幻文学中(狭义上),两个现实系统发生碰撞,让读者不确定这两个系统中的哪一个最终在虚构世界中统治,而侦探小说通常是在一个›简单现实的宇宙中解决的。仔细观察当代侦探小说系列,即塔娜·弗伦奇的都柏林故事(2007-),我将转向一个例子,在这个例子中,›部内连贯性的类型惯例为不同叙述者的不可靠性提供了证据,而仅就该系列的每一卷而言,每个叙述者都可以被认为是完全可靠的。一旦我们有几个叙述者讲述发生在同一个虚构世界中的故事,那么不可靠的叙述可能是由于不同叙述者对这个宇宙中虚构真实情况的陈述不一致。此外,Tana French的例子对叙事学特别感兴趣,因为在其中一卷中,出现了一个非个人的、似乎无所不知的叙述者。全知叙事通常被认为是与不可靠不相容的,但正如珍妮·杰克已经表明的那样,事实并非如此:非个人叙事也会陷入矛盾,从而变得不可靠。关于塔娜·弗伦奇的小说,我想补充一点,它也可能不受信任,因为这种叙述的话语可能与同一系列其他卷中其他叙述者的话语相冲突。因此,从系列叙事的角度来看,非个人叙事(或全知全能的叙事)是否可靠的老问题应该重新思考。在叙事连续性的情况下,将不可靠性归因于其中一个交替的叙述者的证据不需要在她/他讲述的特定续集中找到,而是在讲述同一故事世界中事件的其他续集中找到。再次,叙事不可靠性是一个范畴,而不是纯粹的文本分析和描述。同样,塔娜·弗伦奇和以前的阿加莎·克里斯蒂一样,并没有因为打破了让她的侦探故事发生在一个纯粹的›现实世界中的一种类型惯例而受到读者和评论家的惩罚,因为今天,类型惯例正在越来越多地融合。
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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Journal of Literary Theory
Journal of Literary Theory LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM-
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