痴呆和小说中的记忆政治。从作为叙事实验的条件到作为情节工具的病人

M. Zimmermann
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章将21世纪初的痴呆症小说历史地置于第二次世界大战和大屠杀的背景下,这些小说以阿尔茨海默病或类似类型的痴呆症为特征。它将描述痴呆症在小说中如何被部署的变化,这些小说讨论了纳粹德国主要造成的各种罪行和创伤。为了做到这一点,它将把重点放在从20世纪80年代开始的时期,通常被称为“阿尔茨海默病”(Adelman 1995),当时文学写作首次使用了“阿尔茨海默病”一词。1980年至今的这段时间还不足以得出真正的历史定论。但在我看来,我们可以区分痴呆症文学写作的不同阶段(包括重要的重叠时期),特别是在畅销的痴呆症小说中如何探索和运用记忆和遗忘。我将区分:(I) 20世纪80年代的文学小说是在Jens Brockmeier(2015)所称的“记忆热潮”和Andreas Huyssen(2003, 4)所认为的以“记忆话语爆炸”为标志的时期发展起来的;(ii) 20世纪90年代痴呆症护理人员的文学生活写作,作为记忆繁荣时期延续的一部分;(三)21世纪初最畅销的文学小说。这篇文章将20世纪80年代的虚构文本与新世纪的几个标题进行了对话(为了对文学生活写作的反思,我指出了克里斯蒂娜·卢申科、尼娜·施密特和达纳·沃尔拉斯在本卷中的贡献)。我以黛布拉·迪恩的畅销书《列宁格勒的圣母》(2006年)和爱丽丝·拉普兰特广受好评的《心灵的转向》(2011年)为例,将它们与j·伯恩莱夫的畅销小说《心灵之外》(1986年首次出版)进行对比
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dementia and the Politics of Memory in Fiction. From the Condition as Narrative Experiment to the Patient as Plot Device
This essay historically situates dementia fiction of the early 2000s that features Alzheimer’s disease or a similar type of dementia in the context of the Second World War and the Holocaust. It will delineate shifts that have occurred in how dementia is deployed in fiction that negotiates the various crimes committed and traumas predominantly caused by Nazi Germany. To do this, it will focus on the period from the 1980s onwards, commonly referred to as “Alzheimerisation” (Adelman 1995), when literary writing first employed the term “Alzheimer’s disease.” The period between 1980 and today is not distant enough to offer truly historicist conclusions. But to my mind, we can distinguish different phases of dementia literary writing (including significant periods of overlap), especially regarding how memory and forgetting have been explored and deployed in bestselling dementia fiction. I would distinguish: (i) literary fiction of the 1980s developed during what Jens Brockmeier (2015) refers to as the “memory boom” and Andreas Huyssen (2003, 4) sees as marked by an “explosion of memory discourses”; (ii) literary lifewriting by dementia caregivers of the 1990s as part of the continuation of the memory boom period; and (iii) bestselling literary fiction of the early 2000s. This essay brings a fictional text from the 1980s into conversation with several titles of the new century (for reflections on literary life-writing, I point to the contributions by Kristina Lucenko, Nina Schmidt and Dana Walrath in this volume). I take Debra Dean’s bestseller The Madonnas of Leningrad (2006) and Alice LaPlante’s acclaimed Turn of Mind (2011) as my present-day examples and read them against J. Bernlef’s bestselling novel Out of Mind, first published in
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