一,二,一,二

Matthew P. M. Kerr
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引用次数: 0

摘要

弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫试图通过描写海洋来实现终结。对伍尔夫来说,海洋写作不可避免地与19世纪的权力结构联系在一起:海洋是军事和经济力量的男性化象征,(相对地)是帝国的管道。然而,这最后一章在伍尔夫的两部重要小说中对19世纪海洋的两种形式的债务进行了对比。虽然《远航》显示了伍尔夫抛弃了沙文主义和帝国主义的海洋风格和故事,但海洋后来使富有生产力的形式不稳定成为可能,《海浪》正是在这种不稳定的基础上展开了对帝国父权制的批判。这一章的一个简短结尾总结了本书的中心论点和观点,特别是它的论点不仅与海洋写作的研究有关,而且与更广泛的文学语言的研究有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
One, Two, One, Two
Virginia Woolf attempted to enact closure through writing about the sea. For Woolf, sea-writing is inexorably associated with nineteenth-century power structures: the sea is a masculinized emblem of military and economic might, and (relatedly) a conduit of empire. However, this concluding chapter measures two forms of debt to the nineteenth century’s seas against each other in two key novels by Woolf. While The Voyage Out shows Woolf discarding sea styles and stories as chauvinist and imperialist, the sea later enables the productive formal instability upon which The Waves launches its critique of imperial patriarchy. A short coda to the chapter summarizes central arguments and ideas in the book, in particular the relevance of its argument to studies not just of sea-writing but also of literary language more broadly.
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