动物过度的伦理:伊恩·麦克尤恩的《黑狗》中的暴力和警惕性

IF 0.5 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE
NARRATIVE Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1353/nar.2023.a908404
Ian Tan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文对伊恩·麦克尤恩小说中的伦理想象与伊曼纽尔·列维纳斯提出的人类对他者的责任进行了不同的解读。长期以来,列维纳斯被视为麦克尤恩的自然哲学对话者,他者的另类和超越的概念似乎在麦克尤恩的小说中具体化了主体间的相遇,并促进了人类之间和平关系的伦理态度,这种关系并不否定他者存在的原始性。我认为无条件地采用列维纳斯的伦理方法是有一定困难的,这种方法以列维纳斯的他者资格中固有的矛盾为中心,否定了它对主体性连贯叙述的激进影响。这些反对意见将允许我转向乔治·巴塔耶提出的关于越界和损失的伦理。巴塔耶关于过度的思想建立了一种关于极限及其断裂的辩证思维,使我们能够对伊恩·麦克尤恩的《黑狗》中的伦理和叙事结构进行另一种解读。我展示了巴塔耶如何比列维纳斯更能引人入胜地解读他者和道德自我的古怪本质,以及这种解读如何在麦克尤恩对小说叙事结构和元虚构技巧的处理中得以体现,将过度暴力之后的责任和政治愿景强有力地重新想象在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Ethics of Animal Excess: Violence and Bataillean Vigilance in Ian McEwan's Black Dogs
ABSTRACT: This essay offers a different reading of the ethical imagination in Ian McEwan's fiction from that of human responsibility towards otherness propounded by Emmanuel Levinas. Long regarded as a natural philosophical interlocutor to McEwan, Levinas's concepts of alterity and the transcendence of the other seem to crystallize intersubjective encounters in McEwan's fiction and promote an ethical attitude of peaceable relations between human beings who do not negate the primordiality of the other's presence. I suggest certain difficulties with an unqualified adoption of a Levinasian ethical approach, centered around contradictions inherent in Levinas's qualifications of otherness which negate its radical impact on a coherent account of subjectivity. These objections will allow me to turn to an ethics of transgression and loss as set out by Georges Bataille. Bataille's ideas about excess sets up a dialectical thinking about limits and their fracture which enables an alternative reading of ethics and narrative structure in Ian McEwan's Black Dogs . I demonstrate how Bataille offers a more compelling reading of otherness and the eccentric nature of the ethical self than Levinas, and how this reading is enacted in McEwan's handling of narrative structure and metafictional technique in the novel, stringing together a powerful reimagining of responsibility and political vision in the aftermath of excessive violence.
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NARRATIVE
NARRATIVE LITERATURE-
CiteScore
1.10
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54
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