“Sparks that reach far into the past and spin toward the future”: The Historical Turn in Recent Novels by Susan Glickman, Nancy Richler, and Rhea Tregebov

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
R. Panofsky
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT:Susan Glickman’s The Tale-Teller (2012), Nancy Richler’s Your Mouth Is Lovely (2002), and Rhea Tregebov’s The Knife Sharpener’s Bell (2009) are as invested in Canada as in the historical and cultural past. In each novel, to counterpoint the oppression, imprisonment, and extreme hardship of the Old World, Canada serves literally as a safe haven and figuratively as a harbor of freedom. This essay shows how Glickman, Richler, and Tregebov respectively deploy catalyzing historical events in an effort to amplify their understanding of the cultural past and the Canadian present. The cultural contingencies of present-day Canadian life have given rise to a transnational probing of profound historical complexities, which may be apprehended—though never resolved—through narrative exploration of Jewish identity.
“火花延伸到遥远的过去,旋转到未来”:苏珊·格利克曼、南希·里奇勒和瑞亚·特雷格波夫的《近代小说中的历史转折》
摘要:苏珊·格利克曼的《讲故事的人》(2012年)、南希·里奇勒的《你的嘴很可爱》(2002年)和雷亚·特雷格波夫的《磨刀匠的铃铛》(2009年)在加拿大的历史和文化中都得到了广泛的关注。在每一部小说中,为了对比旧大陆的压迫、监禁和极端困苦,加拿大在字面上是一个安全的避风港,在比喻上是一个自由的港湾。这篇文章展示了格利克曼、里奇勒和特列格波夫分别如何利用催化的历史事件,努力扩大他们对文化过去和加拿大现在的理解。当今加拿大生活的文化偶然性引发了对深刻历史复杂性的跨国探索,这可以通过对犹太人身份的叙事探索来理解——尽管从未得到解决。
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
0.30
自引率
0.00%
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15
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