“这是一个讲故事的时代”:联桥庄园的幽灵怀旧

H. Murray
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在他的历史民间故事中,华盛顿·欧文通过将殖民时期的男性角色与早期国家中消失的“消失的印第安人”联系起来,使他们变得幽灵化。这一章认为欧文使用了带有模糊的土著特征的白人形象,以体现一种等级森严但相互依存的社区和公民身份的殖民愿景,这种愿景本身在早期的国家时期消失了。联桥庄园的幽灵男是过去美国的遗物,他们抗议白人男性公民日益专业化和殖民地公共结构的破坏。在他关于殖民时期的美国和乔治时代的英国的交织故事中,欧文参与了一个“幽灵怀旧”的项目,再现了超自然故事和鬼故事的场景,作为一种拯救和传播这些衰落的公民关系和情感结构的手段。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘This is a story-telling age’: Spectral Nostalgia in Bracebridge Hall
In his historical folk tales, Washington Irving makes colonial male characters ghostly by connecting them to the ‘vanishing Indian’ disappearing across the early nation. This chapter argues that Irving employs liminal White figures marked by spectral indigeneity to enshrine a colonial vision of hierarchical yet interdependent community and citizenship, itself vanishing in the early national period. Bracebridge Hall’s spectral men are relics of a past America, who protest the increasing professionalisation of White male citizens and the destruction of colonial communal structures. In his intertwined tales of colonial America and Georgian England, Irving is involved in a project of ‘spectral nostalgia’, reproducing scenes of supernatural storytelling and ghost stories as a means of rescuing and propagating these fading civic structures of relation and feeling.
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