幸存的主体性:南亚小说中的次等代理谈判

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摘要

本文以斯皮瓦克的作品为文学实践,批判性地分析了阿兰达蒂·罗伊的《小事物之神》和莫妮卡·阿里的《砖巷》。这使得人们能够理解斯皮瓦克的作品所存在的问题和可能性,同时也扩展和重新定位了南亚女性的写作。在探究主流意识形态范式下的次等能动性和主体性的同时,本文探讨了南亚女性小说的政治化解读,并将其与文学形式的关注进行了对话。本研究还强调需要进一步研究后殖民女性作家使用的文学形式,以更深入地了解现实主义和后现代风格之间的相互联系以及女性经验的表现。所选小说的不同结论表明,不仅在表现女性的方法和策略上,而且在主要女性角色的代理程度、歧视、压迫和行动选择上,都存在多样性和复杂性。这导致了文本解释的多样性和多样性,这些文本抵制了读者对同质次等压迫的简单结论。通过阿里笔下的纳兹尼恩、罗伊笔下的阿姆和拉赫尔等人物,入选的作者成功地创造了具有不同经历的复杂女性模型,其中女性既现代又传统,被边缘化又反抗,沉默又坚韧。后殖民时期的女作家通过塑造女性形象来揭示社会问题及其解决方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Surviving Subjectivities: Negotiating Subaltern Agency in South Asian Novel
This paper critically analyses The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy and Brick Lane by Monica Ali with Spivak’s work as literary practice. This enabled the understanding of both the problems and possibilities that Spivak’s work holds while the paper also extends and repositions South Asian women’s writing. While interrogating the subaltern agency and subjectivity within the dominant ideological paradigms, the paper engages with the politicized readings of the South Asian novel written by women which is brought into dialogue with attention to literary form. This research also highlights the need for further investigation of literary forms used by postcolonial women writers to develop a deeper understanding of the interconnections between realist and postmodern styles and the representations of female experience. The different conclusions of the chosen novels suggest diversity and complexity not only in methods and strategies of representing women but also in degrees of agency, discrimination, oppression, and choice of action among the leading female characters. This results in interpretive diversity and variety in the texts which resist simple conclusions about homogenous subaltern oppression which the readers make. Through characters like Ali’s Nazneen, Roy’s Ammu, and Rahel, the selected authors succeed in creating complex models of women with heterogeneous experiences, where a woman is modern and traditional, marginalized and resistant, silent and resilient. Postcolonial women writers depict female characters that showcase the social problems as well as their solutions.
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