《李尔王与失明的讽刺

IF 0.4 2区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
MODERN PHILOLOGY Pub Date : 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1086/726787
James Kuzner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章探讨了莎士比亚在《李尔王》中对盲人形象的讽刺。通过对戏剧“多佛悬崖”场景的关注,我展示了莎士比亚是如何将一种特殊的手法——戏剧讽刺——运用到奇怪的地方。这种反讽往往服务于残疾主义者关于失明的目的,使后者成为戏剧反讽的体现;看不到别人所看到的,意味着无法知道别人所知道的。李尔王的“多佛悬崖”的场景似乎是一个拙劣的例子,一个有视力的角色让一个没有视力的人相信他从悬崖上掉下来,而他只是摔了个脸朝下。然而,我认为,在这一幕中,莎士比亚演绎了戏剧讽刺的崩溃,使我们无法知道谁比谁知道得更多。我的结论是,这种分解打开了一个问题,即失明意味着什么,是什么,这样做创造了另一个更有益的讽刺。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
King Lear and the Irony of Blindness
This essay considers the irony in Shakespeare’s portrayal of blindness in King Lear. With attention to the play’s “Dover cliff” scene, I show how Shakespeare puts a particular device—dramatic irony—to strange use. Such irony often serves ableist purposes with regard to blindness, such that the latter becomes dramatic irony embodied; being unable to see what others see means being unable to know what others know. Lear’s “Dover cliff” scene can seem an almost parodic instance of this, with a sighted character convincing an unsighted one that he falls from a cliff when he merely falls onto his face. I, though, argue that in this scene Shakespeare enacts a breakdown of dramatic irony, making it impossible to know who knows more than whom. This breakdown, I conclude, opens the question of what blindness can mean and be and in so doing creates another, more salutary irony.
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来源期刊
MODERN PHILOLOGY
MODERN PHILOLOGY Multiple-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
64
期刊介绍: Founded in 1903, Modern Philology sets the standard for literary scholarship, history, and criticism. In addition to innovative and scholarly articles (in English) on literature in all modern world languages, MP also publishes insightful book reviews of recent books as well as review articles and research on archival documents. Editor Richard Strier is happy to announce that we now welcome contributions on literature in non-European languages and contributions that productively compare texts or traditions from European and non-European literatures. In general, we expect contributions to be written in (or translated into) English, and we expect quotations from non-English languages to be translated into English as well as reproduced in the original.
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