Offshore Islands in Aotearoa New Zealand: Robin Hyde, Janet Frame and the “Other” TRADITION

Janet M. Wilson
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Abstract

Islands offshore in Aotearoa New Zealand are locations for experimental fictions that approach the issues of exclusion/inclusion through “cast off” perspectives. This essay examines – from a historical materialist perspective – novels by writers from the mid-twentieth century: Robin Hyde (Wednesday’s Children, 1937) and Janet Frame (A State of Siege, 1966), whose island locations expand the national imaginary with interrogations of female subjectivity, landscape and society. Drawing on Etienne Balibar’s concept of homo nationalis (i.e. the national being or citizen as subject), it claims that islands are sites for new start-ups in their fiction: they enable alternative representations of the female artist within the nation-state that nevertheless show reduced connectedness to national frameworks that shape social identities. The isolated spinster hero interrogates her self-construction, undergoes loss of the boundaries of self/other, inside/outside, and belonging/non-belonging, leading to self-fragmentation and dissolution.
新西兰奥特罗阿的近海岛屿:罗宾·海德,珍妮特·弗雷姆和“其他”传统
新西兰奥特罗阿的近海岛屿是实验性小说的创作地点,这些小说通过“被抛弃”的视角来处理排斥/包容问题。本文从历史唯物主义的角度考察了20世纪中期作家的小说:罗宾·海德(《星期三的孩子》,1937年)和珍妮特·弗莱姆(《围城状态》,1966年),他们的岛屿背景通过对女性主体性、风景和社会的质疑扩展了民族想象。借鉴Etienne Balibar的“民族人”概念(即作为主体的国家存在或公民),它声称岛屿是小说中新创业的场所:它们使女性艺术家在民族国家内的另类表现成为可能,但却显示出与塑造社会身份的国家框架之间的联系减少了。孤立的老处女主人公对自我建构的质疑,自我/他者、内在/外在、归属/非归属的界限丧失,导致自我破碎和解体。
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
Molecular interventions
Molecular interventions 生物-生化与分子生物学
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