{"title":"追寻过去:Józef韦森霍夫的《黑貂和女孩》中的狩猎","authors":"Dalia Pauliukevičiūtė","doi":"10.15388/litera.2022.64.1.3","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The article investigates Józef Weyssenhoff’s novel The Sable and the Girl (Polish: Soból i panna) published in 1911. The name of its author is rarely mentioned when discussing the Polish literature of the late 19th and early 20th century. Most literary critics agree, however, that the signature feature in Weyssenhoff’s works is his poetic descriptions of nature and hunting, especially in aforementioned work. The article analyses the interplay of Lithuanian and Polish cultures in this text as well as its Lithuanian literary geography. The question is raised as to what cultural and literary meanings might have been concentrated in the novel at the turn of the 20th century, and what Polish-Lithuanian cultural connections were revealed due to it. The article introduction offers a brief overview of the changes in depicting hunting in Western literature and cultural tradition, and considers to what extent those insights are still valid when analysing the works of various authors attributed to and impacted by the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The article further traces the competing plots of love and hunting in Weyssenhoff’s novel, and the writer’s ambition to employ the symbol of the lost world – hunting. A combination of extratextual references, internal textual relations, and detectable intertexts has been employed to interpret the novel; therefore, when delving into the development of the narrative, none of the theories (e.g., intertextuality) is clearly dominant. When discussing The Sable and the Girl in the Lithuanian cultural field, the historical contexts of the early 20th century Russian Empire, the intertexts of Polish literary tradition as well as the concept of hunting and a colonial look at the sociocultural environment where the narrative is developed remain of similar significance.","PeriodicalId":432201,"journal":{"name":"Literatūra","volume":"61 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Pursuing the Past: Hunting in Józef Weyssenhoff’s The Sable and the Girl\",\"authors\":\"Dalia Pauliukevičiūtė\",\"doi\":\"10.15388/litera.2022.64.1.3\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The article investigates Józef Weyssenhoff’s novel The Sable and the Girl (Polish: Soból i panna) published in 1911. The name of its author is rarely mentioned when discussing the Polish literature of the late 19th and early 20th century. Most literary critics agree, however, that the signature feature in Weyssenhoff’s works is his poetic descriptions of nature and hunting, especially in aforementioned work. The article analyses the interplay of Lithuanian and Polish cultures in this text as well as its Lithuanian literary geography. The question is raised as to what cultural and literary meanings might have been concentrated in the novel at the turn of the 20th century, and what Polish-Lithuanian cultural connections were revealed due to it. The article introduction offers a brief overview of the changes in depicting hunting in Western literature and cultural tradition, and considers to what extent those insights are still valid when analysing the works of various authors attributed to and impacted by the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The article further traces the competing plots of love and hunting in Weyssenhoff’s novel, and the writer’s ambition to employ the symbol of the lost world – hunting. A combination of extratextual references, internal textual relations, and detectable intertexts has been employed to interpret the novel; therefore, when delving into the development of the narrative, none of the theories (e.g., intertextuality) is clearly dominant. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文考察了Józef魏森霍夫1911年出版的小说《貂和女孩》(波兰语:Soból i panna)。在讨论19世纪末和20世纪初的波兰文学时,作者的名字很少被提及。然而,大多数文学评论家都同意,韦森霍夫作品的标志性特征是他对自然和狩猎的诗意描述,尤其是在前面提到的作品中。本文分析了本文中立陶宛和波兰文化的相互影响以及立陶宛文学地理。人们提出的问题是,在20世纪之交,这部小说可能集中了什么样的文化和文学意义,以及由此揭示了波兰和立陶宛的哪些文化联系。文章的引言简要概述了西方文学和文化传统中描写狩猎的变化,并在分析立陶宛大公国遗产所影响的各种作者的作品时,考虑到这些见解在多大程度上仍然有效。文章进一步追溯了韦森霍夫小说中爱情与狩猎的竞争情节,以及作者运用失落世界的象征——狩猎的野心。文本外参考、内部文本关系和可察觉的互文的组合被用来解释小说;因此,当深入研究叙事的发展时,没有一个理论(如互文性)是明显的主导。当在立陶宛文化领域讨论《黑貂与女孩》时,20世纪初俄罗斯帝国的历史背景、波兰文学传统的互文、狩猎的概念以及对叙事发展的社会文化环境的殖民观察仍然具有类似的意义。
Pursuing the Past: Hunting in Józef Weyssenhoff’s The Sable and the Girl
The article investigates Józef Weyssenhoff’s novel The Sable and the Girl (Polish: Soból i panna) published in 1911. The name of its author is rarely mentioned when discussing the Polish literature of the late 19th and early 20th century. Most literary critics agree, however, that the signature feature in Weyssenhoff’s works is his poetic descriptions of nature and hunting, especially in aforementioned work. The article analyses the interplay of Lithuanian and Polish cultures in this text as well as its Lithuanian literary geography. The question is raised as to what cultural and literary meanings might have been concentrated in the novel at the turn of the 20th century, and what Polish-Lithuanian cultural connections were revealed due to it. The article introduction offers a brief overview of the changes in depicting hunting in Western literature and cultural tradition, and considers to what extent those insights are still valid when analysing the works of various authors attributed to and impacted by the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The article further traces the competing plots of love and hunting in Weyssenhoff’s novel, and the writer’s ambition to employ the symbol of the lost world – hunting. A combination of extratextual references, internal textual relations, and detectable intertexts has been employed to interpret the novel; therefore, when delving into the development of the narrative, none of the theories (e.g., intertextuality) is clearly dominant. When discussing The Sable and the Girl in the Lithuanian cultural field, the historical contexts of the early 20th century Russian Empire, the intertexts of Polish literary tradition as well as the concept of hunting and a colonial look at the sociocultural environment where the narrative is developed remain of similar significance.