“她的特别音乐”:保罗·马歇尔的《渔王》中的狂野女人和爵士乐

P. Lespinasse
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引用次数: 0

摘要

保罗·马歇尔的爵士小说《渔王》编织了一个错综复杂的故事,讲述了20世纪40年代末和50年代初女性与爵士乐的关系。从书的内页上对小说的描述,到试图挖掘其含义的评论和学术研究,这本书的叙述主要被解读为父系文本。这篇文章提出了一种母系的阅读方式,关注那些在叙事中占据主导地位的女性,她们作为“传承”爵士乐遗产的档案主体,最终通过语言和形象将音乐从结构束缚中解放出来。本文关注马歇尔在《渔王》中挑战和修正爵士文学的主要修辞和关注点的方式。从文化批评和女性主义理论出发,马歇尔爵士小说中的三个母题——狂野的女人、爵士乐的即兴时刻和呼唤与回应,展示了马歇尔如何利用爵士乐的即兴和自由的基本要素,通过修辞性的对话和即兴时刻来重构女性身体的传统观念。我认为马歇尔为黑人女性创造了一个空间(字面上和比喻上),并挑战了美国和国外男性主导的爵士乐叙事。我认为,马歇尔将黑人女性塑造为即兴表演者/创新者/创造者的各种形象,是为了将女性置于爵士乐文学话语的中心,而不是边缘。最终,《渔王》成为马歇尔将黑人女性、爵士音乐和散居非洲文学联系在一起的超凡能力的典范。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"Her Special Music": Wild Women and Jazz in Paule Marshall’s The Fisher King
Paule Marshall’s jazz novel, The Fisher King, weaves an intricate tale about women and jazz in the late nineteen forties and early fifties. From the novel’s description on the inside flap of the book to the reviews and scholarship that attempt to unearth it’s meaning, the narrative has been predominantly read as a patrilineal text. This article proposes a matrilineal reading that focuses on the women who populate the narrative and serve as the archival bodies that “pass on” the legacy of jazz and ultimately free the music from its structural bondage through language and image. This article attends to the way that Marshall challenges and revises major tropes and concerns of jazz literature in The Fisher King . Drawing on cultural criticism and feminist theories, three motifs in Marshall’s jazz novel —wild women, the jazz moment of improvisation, and call and response demonstrate how Marshall uses jazz’s essential elements of improvisation and freedom to reconstruct traditional notions of the female body through rhetorical dialogue and moments of improvisation. I argue that Marshall creates a space (literally and figuratively) for black female agency and challenges the male-dominated narratives about jazz music in America and abroad. I contend that Marshall constructs varied images of black women as improvisers/innovators/creators in order to place women at the center, rather than on the periphery, of jazz literary discourse. Ultimately, The Fisher King becomes a prime example of Marshall’s uncanny ability to (re)inscribe the interconnections between black women, jazz music, and African Diaspora literature.
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