奴隶制与自由之间的自由意志:哈丽雅特·雅各布斯《一个女奴的生活事件》中琳达·布伦特的研究

Halah Salman Hassan Hadla, L. Hassan
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摘要

哈丽特·雅各布斯是一位作家和改革家。作为十九世纪的女作家,雅各布斯的叙事是一种反抗奴隶制的手段。她在1842年出版的《一个女奴生活中的事件:由她自己写的》一书中反思了对黑人的剥削,以及改变统治白人/黑人关系的等级态度的必要性。她参与了许多废奴主义活动,她的反奴隶制态度在她的作品中清晰地表现出来。她认同杜bios关于自由和解放的观点,以及政治和文化变革的必要性。因此,杜波依斯的理论为她的自传体小说提供了一个框架,她在小说中描绘了主人公琳达·布伦特,一位意志坚强的女士,在经历了痛苦的旅程后走向自由。尽管文化地位和成长经历不同,雅各布斯和杜波依斯都从对个人经历的主观描述转向了对黑人在奴隶制中的一般状况以及黑人在生活中所面临的歧视的客观陈述。对雅各布斯来说,自由是一个人必须为之奋斗的选择,是一个通过抵抗和抗议来完成的心理过程。她的反抗策略体现在小说的三个方面;帮助她度过这段旅程的家人;怀孕和孩子父亲的选择;最后,她成为了母亲,并承诺给她的孩子一个更美好的未来。本文的结论是,雅各布斯的小说是奴隶声音的叙事先例,是对奴隶制后身份的重新发掘。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Free will between Slavery and Freedom: A Study of Linda Brent in Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs
Harriet Jacobs was a writer and a reformer. As a female writer in the nineteenth century, Jacobs wrote her narrative as a means of resisting the system of slavery. She wrote her book Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl: Written by Herself, (1842) to reflect upon the exploitation of the black people and the need to change the hierarchal attitude that governs white/black relations. She was engaged in many abolitionist events and her anti-slavery approach appeared clearly in her writings. She shares Du Bios ideas about freedom and emancipation and the need for a political and cultural change. Thus, Du Bois’s theory provides a framework for her autobiographical novel where she portrays Linda Brent, the main character, a strong willed lady whose path to freedom came after an agonizing journey. Despite differences in cultural status and upbringing, both of Jacobs and Du Bois go from a subjective representation of a personal experience to an objective statement about the general conditions of black people in slavery, and the discrimination black people face during their lives. To Jacobs, freedom is a choice a person has to fight for, and a mental process that is accomplished through resistance and protest. Her strategies of resistance came through three points in the novel; the family, who helped her through her journey; pregnancy and the choice of the father of her kids; and finally motherhood and the promise of a better future for her children. This paper concludes that Jacobs’s novel is a narrative antecedent for slaves’ voices and a reclamation of identity after slavery.
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