拉丁文学中的矛盾

Patrick Glauthier
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在拉丁文学的语境中,不一致最常被用来表示自相矛盾:例如,在第二部《乔治》中,维吉尔宣称意大利没有蛇,但在下一本书中,蛇对意大利农民和他的动物构成了致命的威胁。然而,不一致也可以描述一般的模棱两可,缺乏统一,事实不准确,以及几乎任何种类的不连贯。一些历史上偶然的因素会影响读者对不一致的认识和反应。古代对荷马史诗和埃涅阿斯纪的批评通常认为不一致是有缺陷的,这一传统影响了现代人对这一主题的思考。从20世纪后期开始,评论家们经常将不一致的创造视为一种故意的作者策略:读者暴露在两种不同的现实中,由此产生的张力有助于整个作品的意义。罗马文学文化对不一致性的明显接受可能意味着一种世界观,这种世界观与量子力学有更多的共同之处,而不是由非矛盾律支配的亚里士多德式宇宙。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
inconsistencies in Latin literature
In the context of Latin literature, inconsistency is most often invoked to mean self-contradiction: for example, in the second Georgic, Virgil declares that Italy is blissfully free from snakes, but in the following book, snakes pose a deadly threat to the Italian farmer and his animals. Inconsistency, however, can also describe general ambiguity, lack of unity, factual inaccuracy, and incoherence of almost any kind. A number of historically contingent factors affect how readers recognize and respond to inconsistencies. Ancient criticism of the Homeric poems and the Aeneid often considered inconsistencies flaws, and this tradition has influenced modern thinking about the topic. From the late 20th century onwards, critics have frequently viewed the creation of inconsistency as a deliberate authorial strategy: the reader is exposed to two different realities, and the resulting tension contributes to the meaning of the work as a whole. The apparent receptivity of Roman literary culture to inconsistency may imply a worldview that had more in common with quantum mechanics than an Aristotelian universe dominated by the law of non-contradiction.
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