文学、人权和冷战

Andrew M. Hammond
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管联合国大会于1948年12月10日通过的《世界人权宣言》雄心勃勃,但在随后的四十年中,全球正义和自由的建立几乎没有取得进展。其结果之一是形成了一股重要的冷战文学,记录了工业化、极权主义和超级大国干涉主义的残酷影响,并为那些仍然被阶级、性别、性取向、种族和民族边缘化的人提供了支持,他们感到自己被排除在《世界人权宣言》关于共同人性的概念之外。本文探讨了其中的许多主题,分析了世界各地的人权文学,包括自传体证词、政治小说、后殖民诗歌、反乌托邦戏剧和后现代主义小说。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Literature, Human Rights, and the Cold War
Despite the ambitions of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 10 December 1948, the establishment of global justice and freedom made little progress over the following four decades. One of the results was a significant strand of Cold War literature that documented the brutalising effects of industrialisation, totalitarianism and superpower interventionism and that advocated for those who, still marginalised by class, gender, sexuality, race and ethnicity, felt excluded from the UDHR's conception of a common humanity. Taking up many of these themes, this essay analyses human rights literature from around the world, including examples of autobiographical testimony, political fiction, postcolonial poetry, dystopian drama and postmodernist fiction.
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