边界:北爱尔兰边界小说

Maud Ellmann
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本章考察了英属北爱尔兰与爱尔兰共和国之间的边界对最近爱尔兰小说的影响,这是“群岛上最军事化的边界”。这条边界被设想一个统一的爱尔兰的爱尔兰民族主义者谴责为空间上的异端邪说,但被坚持在政治上效忠于英国的联合主义者辩护为正统。本章比较了两部以边境地区为背景的惊悚小说,尤金·麦凯布的《受害者》和本尼迪克特·凯利的《蒲克斯歌剧》,以及安娜·伯恩斯以贝尔法斯特为背景的解构式成长小说《无骨》。麦凯布和基利的中篇小说重新诠释了“大房子”小说的传统,即关注家庭空间,既禁锢又开放,而伯恩斯则展示了边界如何在家庭、城市和思想中传播分裂,破坏了外部和内部、公共冲突和私人疯狂之间的区别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Borderation: Fictions of the Northern Irish Border
This chapter examines the impact on recent Irish fiction of the border dividing British Northern Ireland from the Irish Republic, ‘the most militarised border in the archipelago’. This border is deplored as a spatial heresy by Irish nationalists who envision a united Ireland, but defended as an orthodoxy by Unionists who insist on their political allegiance to the British state. This chapter compares two thrillers set in borderland territory, Eugene McCabe’s Victims and Benedict Kiely’s Proxopera, with Anna Burns’s deconstructed bildungsroman No Bones, set in Belfast. While McCabe’s and Kiely’s novellas rework the conventions of the Big House novel, with its traditional focus on domestic space, at once imprisoning and open to invasion, Burns shows how the border spreads division through the home, the city, and the mind, undermining the distinction between outside and inside, public strife and private madness.
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