托马斯·多赫蒂《现实主义的政治》(书评)

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
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Docherty suggests that the way 'censorship was used to divert attention from real conditions of human [End Page 585] life, to banish these conditions from representation and from easy availability to a public assembly or society' (p. 228) is linked to the operations of realism, an aesthetic vested in control over what constitutes reality, in the sense of giving credence to what is 'realistic' or established as non-controvertible. Gustave Courbet, to take one instance, challenges conventional notions of propriety by identifying the real with irreducibly material conditions of the human body: labour, sex, death. Realism's 'mimetic adequacy' (p. 165) thus obtains a political charge, though as Docherty engages with more examples it should become clear that nineteenth-century realism involves more than mere verisimilitude. In Chapter 4, realism in Dickens's Bleak House and Hard Times 'operates as a mechanism for calling into question the idea of a single authoritative account of what constitutes reality itself' (p. 98). In Part ii, an opening interlude on Henry James gives way to discussions of Zola, Turgenev, the documentary film-maker Jane Anthony Grierson, Anatoly Lunacharsky's Soviet Socialist realism, and the ways in which realism seeks to catalyse change, which Docherty frames in terms of a reader's 'education'. Docherty's characterization of realism unfolds heuristically as the book advances, which allows readers to feel themselves into his train of thought. In one way or another, we are told, all of these works 'orient us towards indeterminacy, and away from the certainties that are grounded in any fundamentalist belief-system' (p. 228). In Part iii, Docherty explicitly pitches realism against fascism, wherein 'the reality that we seek lies hidden under a fictionalized or mythic account of what constitutes the real world' (p. 228). Chapters parse the abolition of theatrical censorship in England in 1968, shadowed by Mary Whitehouse's moral purity campaigns, and cast realism as 'resistance' in Italian neo-realism and against Leni Riefenstahl's Nazi propaganda, where reality exists literally as an effect of the aesthetic. Despite its anti-fascist convictions and clarion call for realism's anti-establishment ethos, The Politics of Realism is perhaps best understood as a left-liberal intervention orienting close readings of a European aesthetic corpus around familiar arguments about a constellation of contemporary political issues: populism, censorship, the nature of truth, the politicization of the law, the politics of identity. According to Docherty, the book aims to show how 'the State actually creates the norms that it says it wants to defend, and then ascribes the validity of those values by attributing them to a co-opted general public and by underpinning them with theological certainty: reality itself' (pp. 110–11). Docherty's primary interest is in how aesthetics can be used to manufacture consent and foreclose possibility, what he calls 'the new realpolitik' (p. 231). What is at stake in realism is 'control over the opinions of the public in the face of the defiant and recalcitrant material facts' (p. 230). That Docherty centres realism's refusal of narrative totalization and its structurally self-reflexive interrogation of the world as it is (with its contingencies and openness to change) alongside our sense of what the world is (that is to say, the world as we know it, narrate it, visualize it) is a welcome reminder...","PeriodicalId":45399,"journal":{"name":"MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW","volume":"144 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Politics of Realism by Thomas Docherty (review)\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/mlr.2023.a907841\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Reviewed by: The Politics of Realism by Thomas Docherty Charlotte Jones The Politics of Realism. By Thomas Docherty. London: Bloomsbury. 2022. 288 pp. £90. ISBN 978–1–350–22853–5. 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Docherty suggests that the way 'censorship was used to divert attention from real conditions of human [End Page 585] life, to banish these conditions from representation and from easy availability to a public assembly or society' (p. 228) is linked to the operations of realism, an aesthetic vested in control over what constitutes reality, in the sense of giving credence to what is 'realistic' or established as non-controvertible. Gustave Courbet, to take one instance, challenges conventional notions of propriety by identifying the real with irreducibly material conditions of the human body: labour, sex, death. Realism's 'mimetic adequacy' (p. 165) thus obtains a political charge, though as Docherty engages with more examples it should become clear that nineteenth-century realism involves more than mere verisimilitude. In Chapter 4, realism in Dickens's Bleak House and Hard Times 'operates as a mechanism for calling into question the idea of a single authoritative account of what constitutes reality itself' (p. 98). In Part ii, an opening interlude on Henry James gives way to discussions of Zola, Turgenev, the documentary film-maker Jane Anthony Grierson, Anatoly Lunacharsky's Soviet Socialist realism, and the ways in which realism seeks to catalyse change, which Docherty frames in terms of a reader's 'education'. Docherty's characterization of realism unfolds heuristically as the book advances, which allows readers to feel themselves into his train of thought. In one way or another, we are told, all of these works 'orient us towards indeterminacy, and away from the certainties that are grounded in any fundamentalist belief-system' (p. 228). In Part iii, Docherty explicitly pitches realism against fascism, wherein 'the reality that we seek lies hidden under a fictionalized or mythic account of what constitutes the real world' (p. 228). Chapters parse the abolition of theatrical censorship in England in 1968, shadowed by Mary Whitehouse's moral purity campaigns, and cast realism as 'resistance' in Italian neo-realism and against Leni Riefenstahl's Nazi propaganda, where reality exists literally as an effect of the aesthetic. Despite its anti-fascist convictions and clarion call for realism's anti-establishment ethos, The Politics of Realism is perhaps best understood as a left-liberal intervention orienting close readings of a European aesthetic corpus around familiar arguments about a constellation of contemporary political issues: populism, censorship, the nature of truth, the politicization of the law, the politics of identity. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

书评:《现实主义政治》作者:托马斯·多赫蒂·夏洛特·琼斯《现实主义政治》托马斯·多赫蒂著。伦敦:布鲁姆斯伯里出版社,2022。288页,售价90英镑。ISBN 978-1-350-22853-5。当代政治的“不真实”已经成为一种老生常谈,但对于政治来说,“保持真实”意味着什么?托马斯·多赫蒂(Thomas Docherty)对一种有争议的美学所起的作用进行了广泛而生动的描述,以一种散漫甚至迂回的方式,将文学、视觉艺术和电影中的例子编织在一起。有一种灵巧的触觉,使如此广泛的参考感觉轻松但有形。我不太相信的是,多赫蒂所汇集的所有小插曲是否在他提供的关于现实主义的叙述下连贯一致。第一部分开始于1857年,福楼拜和波德莱尔因涉嫌猥亵而陷入法律困境,英国出台了新的《淫秽出版物法》。Docherty认为,“审查制度被用来转移人们对人类生活的真实状况的注意力,将这些状况从再现和公众集会或社会的容易获得性中驱逐出去”(第228页)的方式与现实主义的运作有关,这是一种对构成现实的东西的控制的美学,在某种意义上给予“现实”或确立为无可争议的东西的信任。举个例子,古斯塔夫·库尔贝(Gustave Courbet)通过将真实与人体不可简化的物质条件(劳动、性、死亡)联系起来,挑战了传统的礼仪观念。因此,现实主义的“模仿充分性”(第165页)受到了政治上的指责,尽管随着多彻蒂使用更多的例子,我们应该清楚地看到,19世纪的现实主义不仅仅涉及逼真。在第4章中,狄更斯的《荒凉山庄》和《艰难时期》中的现实主义“作为一种机制,对构成现实本身的单一权威描述提出了质疑”(第98页)。在第二部分中,一段关于亨利·詹姆斯的开场白让位于对左拉、屠格涅夫、纪录片制片人简·安东尼·格里尔森、阿纳托利·卢纳恰尔斯基的苏联社会主义现实主义的讨论,以及现实主义寻求促进变革的方式,多彻蒂用读者的“教育”来构建这些方式。多赫蒂对现实主义的刻画随着书的推进而启发式地展开,这让读者感觉自己进入了他的思路。我们被告知,所有这些作品都以这样或那样的方式“引导我们走向不确定性,远离植根于任何原教旨主义信仰体系的确定性”(第228页)。在第三部分中,多赫蒂明确地将现实主义与法西斯主义对立起来,其中“我们所寻求的现实隐藏在虚构的或神话的对构成现实世界的描述之下”(第228页)。章节分析了1968年英国戏剧审查制度的废除,在玛丽·怀特豪斯的道德纯洁运动的影响下,并将现实主义视为意大利新现实主义的“抵抗”,反对莱尼·里芬斯塔尔的纳粹宣传,在纳粹宣传中,现实作为美学的影响而存在。尽管《现实主义的政治》有着反法西斯的信念,并大声呼吁现实主义的反建制精神,但它最好被理解为一种左翼自由主义的介入,它以对欧洲美学语体的仔细解读为导向,围绕着人们熟悉的关于当代政治问题的争论:民粹主义、审查制度、真理的本质、法律的政治化、身份政治。根据Docherty的说法,这本书的目的是展示“国家实际上是如何创造它声称要捍卫的规范的,然后通过将这些价值观归给一个共同选择的公众,并通过神学确定性(现实本身)来支持它们,从而赋予这些价值观的有效性”(第110-11页)。Docherty的主要兴趣是美学如何被用来制造同意和排除可能性,他称之为“新现实政治”(第231页)。在现实主义中,利害攸关的是“面对目中无人和难以抗拒的物质事实,对公众意见的控制”(第230页)。多赫蒂将现实主义对叙事总化的拒绝,以及它对世界本来面目(及其偶然性和对变化的开放性)的结构性自我反思,与我们对世界的感觉(也就是说,我们所知道的、叙述的、想象的世界)放在一起,这是一个值得欢迎的提醒……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Politics of Realism by Thomas Docherty (review)
Reviewed by: The Politics of Realism by Thomas Docherty Charlotte Jones The Politics of Realism. By Thomas Docherty. London: Bloomsbury. 2022. 288 pp. £90. ISBN 978–1–350–22853–5. The 'unreality' of contemporary politics has become something of a truism, but what does it mean for politics to 'keep it real'? Thomas Docherty's wide-ranging, spirited account of the role played by a contested aesthetic weaves examples from literature, visual arts, and film in a discursive, even meandering, manner. There is a deftness of touch that makes such breadth of reference feel light but tangible. What I am less convinced by is whether all of the vignettes Docherty brings together fit coherently under the narrative about realism he offers. Part i begins in 1857, with Flaubert and Baudelaire in legal difficulties over alleged indecency and a new Obscene Publications Act in England. Docherty suggests that the way 'censorship was used to divert attention from real conditions of human [End Page 585] life, to banish these conditions from representation and from easy availability to a public assembly or society' (p. 228) is linked to the operations of realism, an aesthetic vested in control over what constitutes reality, in the sense of giving credence to what is 'realistic' or established as non-controvertible. Gustave Courbet, to take one instance, challenges conventional notions of propriety by identifying the real with irreducibly material conditions of the human body: labour, sex, death. Realism's 'mimetic adequacy' (p. 165) thus obtains a political charge, though as Docherty engages with more examples it should become clear that nineteenth-century realism involves more than mere verisimilitude. In Chapter 4, realism in Dickens's Bleak House and Hard Times 'operates as a mechanism for calling into question the idea of a single authoritative account of what constitutes reality itself' (p. 98). In Part ii, an opening interlude on Henry James gives way to discussions of Zola, Turgenev, the documentary film-maker Jane Anthony Grierson, Anatoly Lunacharsky's Soviet Socialist realism, and the ways in which realism seeks to catalyse change, which Docherty frames in terms of a reader's 'education'. Docherty's characterization of realism unfolds heuristically as the book advances, which allows readers to feel themselves into his train of thought. In one way or another, we are told, all of these works 'orient us towards indeterminacy, and away from the certainties that are grounded in any fundamentalist belief-system' (p. 228). In Part iii, Docherty explicitly pitches realism against fascism, wherein 'the reality that we seek lies hidden under a fictionalized or mythic account of what constitutes the real world' (p. 228). Chapters parse the abolition of theatrical censorship in England in 1968, shadowed by Mary Whitehouse's moral purity campaigns, and cast realism as 'resistance' in Italian neo-realism and against Leni Riefenstahl's Nazi propaganda, where reality exists literally as an effect of the aesthetic. Despite its anti-fascist convictions and clarion call for realism's anti-establishment ethos, The Politics of Realism is perhaps best understood as a left-liberal intervention orienting close readings of a European aesthetic corpus around familiar arguments about a constellation of contemporary political issues: populism, censorship, the nature of truth, the politicization of the law, the politics of identity. According to Docherty, the book aims to show how 'the State actually creates the norms that it says it wants to defend, and then ascribes the validity of those values by attributing them to a co-opted general public and by underpinning them with theological certainty: reality itself' (pp. 110–11). Docherty's primary interest is in how aesthetics can be used to manufacture consent and foreclose possibility, what he calls 'the new realpolitik' (p. 231). What is at stake in realism is 'control over the opinions of the public in the face of the defiant and recalcitrant material facts' (p. 230). That Docherty centres realism's refusal of narrative totalization and its structurally self-reflexive interrogation of the world as it is (with its contingencies and openness to change) alongside our sense of what the world is (that is to say, the world as we know it, narrate it, visualize it) is a welcome reminder...
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来源期刊
CiteScore
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自引率
0.00%
发文量
157
期刊介绍: With an unbroken publication record since 1905, its 1248 pages are divided between articles, predominantly on medieval and modern literature, in the languages of continental Europe, together with English (including the United States and the Commonwealth), Francophone Africa and Canada, and Latin America. In addition, MLR reviews over five hundred books each year The MLR Supplement The Modern Language Review was founded in 1905 and has included well over 3,000 articles and some 20,000 book reviews. This supplement to Volume 100 is published by the Modern Humanities Research Association in celebration of the centenary of its flagship journal.
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