痛苦的中立:筛选从瑞典引渡波罗的海人

Lars Kristensen, C. Burman
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摘要

摘要:本文探讨了1946年波罗的海士兵从瑞典被引渡的情况,这体现在珀·奥洛夫·恩奎斯特的小说《军团士兵:一部纪实性小说》(Legionärerna)中。影片《波罗的海的悲剧》(baltutlämningen, 1968)和约翰·伯根斯特拉斯赫的电影《波罗的海的悲剧》(Baltutlämningen)。电影《政治家》(1945年,瑞典,1970年)。理论框架取自创伤研究及其在电影研究中的对等内容,其中创伤被视为过去事件的重复发生。在这方面,文学和动态影像成为触及创伤性事件的手段,一种重温创伤性事件的方式。引渡波罗的海士兵与大屠杀等其他创伤的区别在于,它的作用是一种与未能阻止悲剧有关的内疚情结,这与瑞典在第二次世界大战期间的中立立场和对所有交战国家的绥绥化有关。有人认为,这是恩奎斯特的小说造成的集体创伤,并将其扩大到全国范围。然而,bergenstratuhle的电影通过淡化瑞典人的坏良心,改变了创伤的焦点。通过这种方式,这部电影旨在为引渡事件创造新的证人。分析着眼于小说和电影的接受情况,以解释对历史事件的两种不同方法,以及它们产生的两个不同时期。两位作者认为,小说和电影问世之间的两年时间,解释了20世纪60年代末的政治情绪如何转向70年代初的一场萎靡的革命,当时这部电影在全国上映。然而,在创造创伤事件的目击者方面,这本书和电影成功地激起了公众舆论,以至于创伤从慢慢消失转变为通过记忆集体“经历”。矛盾的是,虽然小说仍然生动地提醒人们瑞典在二战期间的中立所造成的痛苦后果,但这部电影今天几乎完全被遗忘了。影片以“我是目击者”的叙述攻击观众的模式、并置和不当行为导致瑞典观众对叙事的排斥。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Painful Neutrality: Screening the Extradition of the Balts from Sweden
Abstract The article deals with the extradition of Baltic soldiers from Sweden in 1946 as represented in Per Olov Enquist’s novel The Legionnaires: A Documentary Novel (Legionärerna. En roman om baltutlämningen, 1968) and Johan Bergenstråhle’s film A Baltic Tragedy (Baltutlämningen. En film om ett politiskt beslut Sverige 1945, Sweden, 1970). The theoretical framework is taken from trauma studies and its equivalent within film studies, where trauma is seen as a repeated occurrence of a past event. In this regard, literature and moving images become the means of reaching the traumatic event, a way to relive it. What separates the extradition of the Baltic soldiers from other traumas, such as the Holocaust, is that it functions as a guilt complex related to the failure to prevent the tragedy, which is connected to Sweden’s position of neutrality during World War II and the appeasement of all the warring nations. It is argued that this is a collective trauma created by Enquist’s novel, which blew it into national proportions. However, Bergenstråhle’s film changes the focus of the trauma by downplaying the bad conscience of the Swedes. In this way, the film aims to create new witnesses to the extradition affair. The analysis looks at the reception of both the novel and film in order to explain the two different approaches to the historical event, as well as the two different time periods in which they were produced. The authors argue that the two years that separate the appearance of the novel and the film explain the swing undergone by the political mood of the late 1960s towards a deflated revolution of the early 1970s, when the film arrived on screens nationwide. However, in terms of creating witnesses to the traumatic event, the book and film manage to stir public opinion to the extent that the trauma changes from being slowly effacing to being collectively ‘experienced’ through remembrance. The paradox is that, while the novel still functions as a vivid reminder of the painful aftermath caused by Swedish neutrality during World War II, the film is almost completely forgotten today. The film’s mode of attacking the viewers with an I-witness account, the juxtaposition and misconduct led to a rejection of the narrative by Swedish audiences.
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