The Tiger (in)Flu(ence): Posthuman, Abject Bodies, ‘Speculated’ Femininities and Diasporic Subjectivities

IF 2 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
C. Battisti
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Written by Larissa Lai, a Chinese-Canadian writer who has always alchemized her production with Chinese mythology, The Tiger Flu (Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press, 2018) is a polyphonic novel because of the plurality of interpretative acts it evokes, and because of its interweaving of different literary frames and genres. In the first part of this essay, I analyse how Lai exploits this complex intertwining of genres to address a sense of diasporic belonging. In the second part, I explore how this approach leads to moving beyond normative and totalizing definitions. Lai sets up a multifaceted feminine space where issues about the rethinking of the category of woman, sisterhood and a broader conception of the community can be raised. I argue that Lai’s representation of non-normative female bodies becomes functional in revealing how abject bodies can challenge the hegemonic meaning of gender and identity. In a critical reading that cannot be divorced from a (trans-)Canadian context, I conclude by exploring how Lai guides her readers on an intimate journey across increasingly fluid borders and an unsolved (and unsolvable) vision of the future.
老虎(在)流感(ence):后人类,卑鄙的身体,“推测”的女性和散居的主体性
《虎流感》(温哥华:兵工厂纸浆出版社,2018年)是一部复调小说,作者是加拿大华裔作家赖赖,她一直用中国神话来炼金她的作品。由于它唤起了多种解释行为,并且由于它交织了不同的文学框架和体裁,它是一部复调小说。在本文的第一部分,我将分析赖是如何利用这种复杂的类型交织来表达散居的归属感的。在第二部分中,我将探讨这种方法如何导致超越规范和总体定义。赖建立了一个多元的女性空间,在这里可以提出关于重新思考女性类别,姐妹情谊和更广泛的社区概念的问题。我认为,赖对非规范女性身体的表现在揭示卑贱的身体如何挑战性别和身份的霸权意义方面具有功能。在这篇离不开(跨)加拿大语境的批判性阅读中,我探讨了赖如何引导她的读者进行一段亲密的旅程,跨越日益流动的边界,以及一个未解决(也无法解决)的未来愿景。
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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来源期刊
Women-A Cultural Review
Women-A Cultural Review HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
自引率
9.10%
发文量
34
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