Kristeva before Kristeva:俄罗斯象征主义中的性别与创造力

Kirsti Ekonen
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Kristeva's theoretical thinking (along with that of her contemporary feminist critics) provides analytical tools and new viewpoints for reading women writers' strategies in the gendered and androcentric aesthetical discourse of Russian symbolism. I will begin by discussing Kristeva's thoughts on subject and creativity from the point of view of gender and some feminist responses to those thoughts. After that I will show the (Russian) fin-de-siecle roots of her thinking. Feminist responses to Kristeva and her theoretical background in fin-de-siecle culture lead me to the women writers of Russian symbolism. I will look at their reactions to contemporary aesthetical discourse, and, as a case study, I will analyze the strategies of two women poets, Zinaida Gippius (1869-1945) and Liudmila Vilkina (1873-1920). They developed special strategies for constructing female creative subjectivity within androcentric symbolist discourse, and, as I will show in the last part of this article, these strategies resonate with Kristeva and her feminist critics. CREATIVITY AND GENDER IN KRISTEVA Kristeva builds her understanding of creativity and the creative process by using the central concepts of the semiotic and the symbolic. In general, these concepts refer to the two orders that participate in the constitution of the subject, production of discourse, and regulation of social relations, as Elizabeth Grosz summarizes (49). In Revolution in Poetic Language, Kristeva uses the concepts of the semiotic and the symbolic to explain the creative process and especially modernist artistic practices and their political significance. The symbolic process refers to the establishment of sign and syntax and to grammatical and social constraints. The semiotic process can also be understood as a kind of pre-verbal energy at work in the text, the source of inspiration. In Kristeva's thinking, the semiotic is related to the child's pre-oedipal relationship with the mother, the mother's body, and, therefore, the feminine. In contrast, the symbolic process refers to the paternal, masculine function. While the symbolic maintains order, the semiotic includes revolutionary aspirations, which threaten order. Kristeva introduces into the formulation of the semiotic the concept of chora: a non-expressive (in the sense of non-verbal) totality underlying language, a non-spatial, non-temporal receptacle of energy and drives. Kristeva borrows the term chora from Plato, who describes it as \"an invasive and formless being which receives all things and in some mysterious way partakes of the intelligible, and is most incomprehensible\" (Plato qtd. in Roudiez 6). The uncertain and undetermined chora lacks thesis or position, unity or identity. Like the semiotic, the chora is qualified as feminine in the sense that it precedes any formations of subjectivity and phallic identity (Smith 21). Although Kristeva was a central thinker in the feminist discussions of the 1980s, her ideas about female subjectivity and women's creativity were controversial. Because the semiotic and the symbolic orders are so strongly marked by gender difference, Kristeva's thought has evoked many questions about the differences between the creativity and subjectivity of men and women. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这篇文章中,我将在俄罗斯早期现代主义,即俄罗斯象征主义的背景下研究朱莉娅·克里斯蒂娃的主体性和创造性理论。我的“与克里斯蒂娃一起阅读”的不合时宜的方法是基于我的观点,即将克里斯蒂娃与早期现代主义文化及其性别化方面进行比较,可以更深入地了解克里斯蒂娃的理论背景,以及克里斯蒂娃的概念和理论思维如何有助于分析俄罗斯象征主义美学和文学实践的性别化方面。此外,Kristeva的思考使我们能够区分这些实践为女性作家创造的具体环境。Kristeva的理论思考(以及她同时代的女权主义评论家的理论思考)为解读女性作家在性别化和男性中心主义的俄罗斯象征主义美学话语中的策略提供了分析工具和新的视角。我将首先从性别的角度讨论Kristeva关于主体和创造力的思想以及一些女权主义者对这些思想的回应。之后,我将展示(俄罗斯)她的思想的世纪末根源。女权主义者对Kristeva的回应以及她在世纪末文化中的理论背景将我引向了俄罗斯象征主义女性作家。我将看看她们对当代美学话语的反应,作为一个案例,我将分析两位女诗人的策略,齐纳伊达·吉皮乌斯(1869-1945)和柳德米拉·维尔金娜(1873-1920)。她们在以男性为中心的象征主义话语中发展了建构女性创造性主体性的特殊策略,正如我将在本文的最后部分所展示的,这些策略与克里斯蒂娃和她的女权主义批评者产生了共鸣。KRISTEVA通过使用符号学和符号学的中心概念来构建她对创造力和创作过程的理解。一般来说,这些概念是指参与主体构成、话语生产和社会关系调节的两种秩序,正如Elizabeth Grosz总结的那样(49)。在《诗歌语言的革命》一书中,Kristeva用符号学和符号学的概念解释了创作过程,特别是现代主义艺术实践及其政治意义。符号过程指的是符号和句法的建立,以及语法和社会约束的建立。符号学过程也可以理解为在文本中起作用的一种言语前能量,是灵感的源泉。在Kristeva的思想中,符号学与孩子与母亲的前俄狄浦斯关系有关,母亲的身体,因此,女性化。相反,象征过程指的是父亲的、男性的功能。象征维持秩序,而符号学则包含威胁秩序的革命愿望。Kristeva在符号学的表述中引入了合唱的概念:一种隐含在语言之下的非表达性(在非言语的意义上)整体,一种非空间、非时间的能量和动力的容器。Kristeva从柏拉图那里借用了“合唱团”这个词,柏拉图将其描述为“一种侵入性的、无形的存在,它接受所有的事物,并以某种神秘的方式分享可理解的东西,而且是最不可理解的”(柏拉图第4章)。不确定和不确定的合唱团缺乏主题或位置,统一或身份。像符号学一样,合唱团在某种意义上被限定为女性,因为它先于主体性和阳具身份的任何形成(Smith 21)。虽然Kristeva是20世纪80年代女权主义讨论的核心思想家,但她关于女性主体性和女性创造力的观点却备受争议。由于符号学和象征秩序的性别差异是如此强烈,Kristeva的思想引发了许多关于男女创造力和主体性差异的问题。然而,对于这个最重要的问题,她的理论并没有给出明确的答案。...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Kristeva before Kristeva: Gender and Creativity in Russian Symbolism
In this article I will look at Julia Kristeva's theory of subjectivity and creativity in the context of early Russian modernism, that is, Russian symbolism. My anachronistic way of "reading with Kristeva" is based on my argument that comparing Kristeva and early modernist culture and its gendered aspects will provide a deeper understanding of Kristeva's theoretical background and of how Kristeva's concepts and theoretical thinking help analyze the gendered aspects of the aesthetics and literary practices of Russian symbolism. Moreover, Kristeva's thinking enables us to distinguish the specific circumstances these practices create for women writers. Kristeva's theoretical thinking (along with that of her contemporary feminist critics) provides analytical tools and new viewpoints for reading women writers' strategies in the gendered and androcentric aesthetical discourse of Russian symbolism. I will begin by discussing Kristeva's thoughts on subject and creativity from the point of view of gender and some feminist responses to those thoughts. After that I will show the (Russian) fin-de-siecle roots of her thinking. Feminist responses to Kristeva and her theoretical background in fin-de-siecle culture lead me to the women writers of Russian symbolism. I will look at their reactions to contemporary aesthetical discourse, and, as a case study, I will analyze the strategies of two women poets, Zinaida Gippius (1869-1945) and Liudmila Vilkina (1873-1920). They developed special strategies for constructing female creative subjectivity within androcentric symbolist discourse, and, as I will show in the last part of this article, these strategies resonate with Kristeva and her feminist critics. CREATIVITY AND GENDER IN KRISTEVA Kristeva builds her understanding of creativity and the creative process by using the central concepts of the semiotic and the symbolic. In general, these concepts refer to the two orders that participate in the constitution of the subject, production of discourse, and regulation of social relations, as Elizabeth Grosz summarizes (49). In Revolution in Poetic Language, Kristeva uses the concepts of the semiotic and the symbolic to explain the creative process and especially modernist artistic practices and their political significance. The symbolic process refers to the establishment of sign and syntax and to grammatical and social constraints. The semiotic process can also be understood as a kind of pre-verbal energy at work in the text, the source of inspiration. In Kristeva's thinking, the semiotic is related to the child's pre-oedipal relationship with the mother, the mother's body, and, therefore, the feminine. In contrast, the symbolic process refers to the paternal, masculine function. While the symbolic maintains order, the semiotic includes revolutionary aspirations, which threaten order. Kristeva introduces into the formulation of the semiotic the concept of chora: a non-expressive (in the sense of non-verbal) totality underlying language, a non-spatial, non-temporal receptacle of energy and drives. Kristeva borrows the term chora from Plato, who describes it as "an invasive and formless being which receives all things and in some mysterious way partakes of the intelligible, and is most incomprehensible" (Plato qtd. in Roudiez 6). The uncertain and undetermined chora lacks thesis or position, unity or identity. Like the semiotic, the chora is qualified as feminine in the sense that it precedes any formations of subjectivity and phallic identity (Smith 21). Although Kristeva was a central thinker in the feminist discussions of the 1980s, her ideas about female subjectivity and women's creativity were controversial. Because the semiotic and the symbolic orders are so strongly marked by gender difference, Kristeva's thought has evoked many questions about the differences between the creativity and subjectivity of men and women. However, to this most important question, her theory does not give any clear answer. …
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