20世纪病态作家及其创作

S. Henke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

现代主义时期的三位作家:弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫、詹姆斯·乔伊斯和d·h·劳伦斯所展示的文化建构的病态,揭示了从瘫痪的抑郁或强迫行为到实验性小说中创造性天才的爆发的情感轨迹。每一位作者都与个人的心理困扰史作斗争,这些心理困扰由遗传、经验或文化因素证明,并因童年或青春期的创伤事件而加剧。这三个人都试图通过复杂的审美再现动作来处理创伤后压力,这一过程可能被描述为脚本疗法。伍尔夫是饱受折磨的艺术家与所谓的疯狂作斗争的缩影。在她的经典中,她自觉地与性别、落魄和哀悼等不可调和的问题作斗争。在伍尔夫自己的精神病史中,似乎患有双相情感障碍,这很可能导致了她一生的创造力,但同时也伴随着严重的使人衰弱的抑郁症。乔伊斯挣扎于对情色背叛的病态恐惧中,这种恐惧激发了他对通奸和配偶同谋之谜的痴迷,这种戏剧的情色变态后来在他20世纪的史诗小说《尤利西斯》中得到了体现。d·h·劳伦斯因其对性欲的病态迷恋、同性社会关系、情爱丧失和配偶背叛而臭名昭著。这些作家通过病理症状,将早期疯狂的种子转化为萌芽的文学天才作品。他们通过创造激进的创新和实验艺术,将创伤性损失的痛苦融入美学整合的胜利中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Twentieth-Century Pathological Writers and Their Creativity
Culturally constructed pathologies exhibited by three authors of the modernist period: Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and D. H. Lawrence, reveal an emotional trajectory from paralyzing depressive or obsessive behavior to explosions of creative genius channeled into experimental fiction. Each of these authors struggled with a personal history of psychological distress evinced by genetic, experiential, or cultural factors and exacerbated by traumatic events in childhood or adolescence. All three sought to handle posttraumatic stress through complex gestures of aesthetic reenactment in a process that might be described as scriptotherapy. Woolf epitomizes the tortured artist grappling with so-called madness. Throughout her canon, she self-consciously struggles with irreconcilable issues of gender, abjection, and mourning. What appears to have been bipolar disorder in Woolf’s own psychiatric history might well have engendered a lifetime of creativity punctuated by severe bouts of debilitating depression. Joyce struggled with a pathological fear of erotic betrayal that spurred an obsessional fascination with adultery and with the enigma of spousal complicity, a drama whose erotic perversities were later played out in his twentieth-century epic novel, Ulysses. D. H. Lawrence proved somewhat notorious for his pathological obsessions with sexual desire, homosocial bonding, erotic loss, and conjugal betrayal. These authors worked through pathological symptoms to convert the seeds of incipient madness into burgeoning works of literary genius. They incorporated the pain of traumatic loss into the triumph of aesthetic integration via the creation of radically innovative and experimental art.
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