检视与精神疾病有关的“正常”:以简爱为例

Prakash Kona
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摘要

我们如何理解在用来定义“精神疾病”的参数之外的正常社会行为?术语的清晰性对于确保我们对精神疾病的认知不仅仅是一种理论练习,而是始终与我们的日常生活联系在一起非常重要。一个人可以在表现出不正常的性格特征的同时,看起来完全正常。这样的事情并不一定会使他们与社会格格不入,因为在所有实际目的中,他们仍然可以被视为“正常”。举例来说,我选择了小说《简·爱》。《简爱》绝不是一部简单、迷人的浪漫故事,它不仅讲述了一个女孩为自尊而奋斗的故事,也讲述了一个面对潜在精神疾病、为“正常”而挣扎的人的故事。本文的后半部分主要围绕两个方面展开:一是我们不能忽视现实主义小说的体裁本身是阶级矛盾和性别矛盾的产物。《简爱》所特有的另一个因素是,在他们渴望成为“正常人”的过程中,人物表现出一种病态的症状,他们的行为受到了控制,并延伸为欺骗行为,这足以让人认为这部小说是对精神疾病的研究,而不是对一个和谐社会的描绘。这篇文章是在面对患精神疾病的恐惧时对常态的批判——叙述者经历了这种恐惧,并将这种恐惧传达给了读者。在此过程中,本文利用文本的一些文学方面来谈论人物,使他们尽可能接近现实。这些人物在作者的脑海中不仅仅是虚构的存在,而是可以被置于社会和历史背景中的个体。在试图研究与简·爱有关的精神疾病时,本文关注了小说中的其他一些人物,如海伦·伯恩斯、布罗克赫斯特和圣约翰·里弗斯。还探讨了殖民者世界中精神疾病的殖民维度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Examining the “normal” in Relation to Mental Illness: The Case of Jane Eyre
How do we understand what is normal social behavior outside the parameters that are used to define “mental illness”? Terminological clarity is important in ensuring that our perception of mental illness is not just a theoretical exercise but is invariably connected to our day-to-day lives. A person could appear completely normal while displaying abnormal traits in his or her character. Something like that does not necessarily make them social misfits because they could still be perceived as “normal” for all practical purposes. For an instance of the normalization of the abnormal, I selected the novel Jane Eyre. Far from being a simple, captivating romance, Jane Eyre is not just about a girl struggling for self-respect but also someone who is trapped in a struggle for “normalcy” in the face of potential mental illness. The latter part of my paper revolves around two aspects: one is that we cannot conceive of the Realist novel without seeing that the genre of the novel itself is a product of class and gender-based contradictions. Another factor, specific to Jane Eyre, is that in their desperation to be “normal,” the characters display morbid symptoms of a controlled and by extension deceptive behavior that would qualify for an argument that the novel is a study of mental illness, rather than a picture of a society at harmony with itself. The paper is a critique of normalcy in the face of the fear of falling mentally ill – a fear experienced by the narrator and communicated to the reader. In the process, the paper uses some of the literary aspects of the text to talk about characters in a manner that brings them as close as possible to reality. The characters are not just imaginary beings in the author’s mind, but individuals who could be situated in a social and a historical context. In attempting to examine mental illness in relation to Jane Eyre, the paper pays attention to some of the other characters in the novel such as Helen Burns, Brocklehurst, and St. John Rivers. The colonial dimension of mental illness in the colonizer’s world is also explored.
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