“Such as might have arisen only out of hell”: A Note on Poe’s Hellenic Motifs in “The Black Cat”

IF 0.3 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Dimitrios Tsokanos, José R. Ibáñez
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Black Cat” has received a great deal of scholarly attention over the years from a variety of perspectives, not least the domestic and symbolic presence of Pluto in the story. Kent Ljungquist (1980) saw Poe’s narrative in terms of classical literary tradition, specifically the notion of the daemonic, yet confined his study to Pluto’s demonic features, arguing that the cat may be an infernal spirit sent to castigate the narrator. Other studies, such as Clark Moreland and Karime Rodriguez (2015), have reached similar conclusions. However, there is a surprising absence in the literature of any discussion of Poe’s decision to name the ‘phantasm’ of his narrative after the Hellenic god of the Underworld. The present paper seeks to address this, and proposes that Poe’s Pluto may not simply function as a demonic spirit, but rather as the Pluto of Hellenic mythology himself.
“这样的事只可能发生在地狱里”——评爱伦·坡《黑猫》中的希腊主题
多年来,埃德加·爱伦·坡的《黑猫》从不同的角度受到了大量的学术关注,尤其是故事中冥王星的国内和象征性存在。Kent Ljungquist(1980)从古典文学传统的角度看待坡的叙事,特别是恶魔的概念,但他的研究局限于冥王星的恶魔特征,认为猫可能是被派来惩罚叙述者的地狱之灵。其他研究,如Clark Moreland和Karime Rodriguez(2015),也得出了类似的结论。然而,令人惊讶的是,在文学作品中却没有任何关于坡决定以希腊神话中的冥界之神来命名他的故事中的“幻影”的讨论。本文试图解决这一问题,并提出坡的普路托可能不仅仅是一个恶魔的灵魂,而是希腊神话中的普路托本身。
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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Complutense Journal of English Studies
Complutense Journal of English Studies LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS-
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