詹姆斯·霍格和沃尔特·斯科特的短篇小说

G. McKeever
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这一章读詹姆斯·霍格和沃尔特·斯科特在一个新的,修正主义的短篇小说的历史,特别感兴趣的类型的“故事”。本章聚焦于1827年至1831年之间的五年,重点介绍了霍格为布莱克伍德的《爱丁堡杂志》和斯科特的《迦南门编年史》(第一部)所做的成熟贡献。这几年的特点是文学实验,当时苏格兰文化中自信的进步正面临瓦解的威胁。这些短篇小说的形式逻辑,由一种奇怪的集中的自发性所定义,加剧了对进步与传统之间冲突的多元处理。不同的时间模式(进步、更新、破坏)和信仰模式(暂停、怀疑、轻信)在商业现代化的广泛背景下对改进进行了质疑。本章在这一背景下揭示了两个具体的文学创新。第一部分着眼于文学市场中的传播行为,它们轮流维持、遏制和延缓进步的辩证法。第二部分看到了斯科特写作中成熟的文化美学词汇的出现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Short Fictions of Improvement by James Hogg and Walter Scott
This chapter reads James Hogg and Walter Scott within a new, revisionist history of short fiction that is particularly interested in the genre of the ‘tale’. Focusing on the half-decade between 1827 and 1831, the chapter highlights a selection of Hogg’s mature contributions to Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine alongside Scott’s Chronicles of the Canongate (first series). These years were marked by literary experimentation, when a confident improving persuasion in Scottish culture was threatening to unravel. The formal logic of these short fictions, defined by a curiously focused spontaneity, exacerbates a pluralistic handling of the collision between improvement and tradition. Different models of time (progress, renewal, disruption) and belief (suspension, scepticism, credulity) serve to interrogate improvement in a wide range of contexts around commercial modernisation. The chapter unpacks two specific literary innovations in this context. The first looks to acts of transmission in the literary marketplace which by turns sustain, contain and defer the dialectics of improvement. The second sees the emergence of a fully fledged aesthetic vocabulary of culture in Scott’s writing.
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