比阿特丽斯·琴西的脸

Stephen H Cheeke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这一章考虑了文艺复兴时期最著名的形象之一的文学回应:比阿特丽斯·琴西的肖像(长期以来被误认为是圭多·雷尼),19世纪罗马的一个主要旅游景点。霍桑是最痴迷于这幅画像的作家,他试图从中读到一种最初的纯真,以及一种在经历了可怕的经历后重新获得或救赎的纯真。因此,比阿特丽斯的画像首先向霍桑展示了他所认为的一种女性知识;他认为这幅画是不透明的,神秘的,在一个逃避分析的层面上运作。霍桑接着把这和幸运堕落的神学联系起来;也就是说,对于一个不容易给出口头表述或总结的基督教概念,它实际上代表了时间的基本奥秘。对霍桑来说,比阿特丽斯·香西脸上的光芒象征着她经历了本质变化的悖论,尽管她在本质上保持不变。这一章的重点是霍桑在《大理石半人半羊羊》中努力理解这一观点——定义比阿特丽斯·琴西知道什么;还有她是怎么知道的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The face of Beatrice Cenci
This chapter considers literary responses to one of the most famous Renaissance images of all: the supposed portrait of Beatrice Cenci (long misattributed to Guido Reni), a major nineteenth-century tourist attraction in Rome. Hawthorne was the writer most obsessively drawn to the portrait, in which he sought to read an original innocence and an innocence regained or redeemed after terrible experience. Beatrice’s portrait therefore presents Hawthorne firstly with what he took to be a type of feminine knowledge; this he aligned with the image as opaque, mysterious, functioning at a level that evades analysis. Hawthorne then proceeds to connect this to the theology of the fortunate fall; that is, to a Christian concept not easily given verbal formulation or summary, one in fact representing a fundamental mystery in time. For Hawthorne, the light of Beatrice Cenci’s face signified the paradox of her having undergone an essential change to her being, though one in which she remained fundamentally the same. The focus of this chapter is Hawthorne’s struggle in The Marble Faun to make sense of this idea – to define just what it is Beatrice Cenci knows; and how she has come to know it.
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