{"title":"Embodiment and the Animal in Guadalupe Nettel’s El matrimonio de los peces rojos","authors":"Isabelle Wentworth","doi":"10.5195/CT/2021.493","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article explores an interaction between posthumanist and cognitive discourses through the work of award winning Mexican author, Guadalupe Nettel. I focus on her 2014 anthology, Natural Histories, rereading the central motif of the narrative, that animals ‘are like a mirror that reflects submerged emotions or behaviours that we don’t dare to see’ (Nettel, 9). This ‘reflection’ is not simply the image of the human reflected off the opaque surface of the animal, but rather the humans themselves act as a mirror, simulating the behaviour of the animals with which they cohabit. This can be read as a literary representation of a neurophysiological phenomenon — embodied simulation, an internal mimicry, either perceptible or imperceptible, performed when watching others completing certain tasks, movements or expressions (Gazzola et al. 2007; Uithol et al. 2011; Iacoboni 2009). In particular, the first story, ‘El matrimonio de los peces rojos’, depicts a profound human-nonhuman embodied resonance that moves between linguistic, narratological and characterological levels. A cognitive critical approach to the mirroring between animals and humans in the stories reveals the particular intersection between new paradigms in cognitive science, animal studies, and posthumanism that the anthology develops, each of its narratives intertwining mind, body and nonhuman other in a non-hierarchical network.","PeriodicalId":40660,"journal":{"name":"Catedral Tomada-Revista de Critica Literaria Latinoamericana-Journal of Latin American Literary Criticism","volume":"164 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Catedral Tomada-Revista de Critica Literaria Latinoamericana-Journal of Latin American Literary Criticism","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5195/CT/2021.493","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: 0
Abstract
This article explores an interaction between posthumanist and cognitive discourses through the work of award winning Mexican author, Guadalupe Nettel. I focus on her 2014 anthology, Natural Histories, rereading the central motif of the narrative, that animals ‘are like a mirror that reflects submerged emotions or behaviours that we don’t dare to see’ (Nettel, 9). This ‘reflection’ is not simply the image of the human reflected off the opaque surface of the animal, but rather the humans themselves act as a mirror, simulating the behaviour of the animals with which they cohabit. This can be read as a literary representation of a neurophysiological phenomenon — embodied simulation, an internal mimicry, either perceptible or imperceptible, performed when watching others completing certain tasks, movements or expressions (Gazzola et al. 2007; Uithol et al. 2011; Iacoboni 2009). In particular, the first story, ‘El matrimonio de los peces rojos’, depicts a profound human-nonhuman embodied resonance that moves between linguistic, narratological and characterological levels. A cognitive critical approach to the mirroring between animals and humans in the stories reveals the particular intersection between new paradigms in cognitive science, animal studies, and posthumanism that the anthology develops, each of its narratives intertwining mind, body and nonhuman other in a non-hierarchical network.
本文通过获奖的墨西哥作家Guadalupe Nettel的作品,探讨了后人类主义和认知话语之间的相互作用。我专注于她2014年的选集《自然历史》,重新阅读了叙事的中心主题,即动物“就像一面镜子,反映出我们不敢看到的隐藏情感或行为”(Nettel, 9)。这种“反射”不仅仅是人类的形象从动物不透明的表面反射出来,而是人类本身就像一面镜子,模仿与他们同居的动物的行为。这可以被解读为一种神经生理现象的文学表现——具体化模拟,一种在观察他人完成某些任务、动作或表情时进行的可察觉或不可察觉的内在模仿(Gazzola et al. 2007;uthol et al. 2011;Iacoboni 2009)。特别是第一个故事“El matrimonio de los pepes rojos”,描绘了一种深刻的人类与非人类的体现共鸣,这种共鸣在语言、叙事和性格层面之间移动。对故事中动物和人类镜像的认知批判方法揭示了该选集发展的认知科学、动物研究和后人文主义新范式之间的特殊交集,其每一种叙事都将思想、身体和非人类他人交织在一个非等级网络中。