安妮·莱基的辅助司法:大卫·m·希金斯的重要伴侣(书评)

IF 0.2 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Veronica Hollinger
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Think of them as the novellas of critical scholarship. David Higgins’s “critical companion” to the first novel of Anne Leckie’s immensely popular Imperial Radch trilogy is the latest in Palgrave’s “New Canon” series. In the words of series editors Keren Omry and Sean Guynes, it “aims to offer ‘go-to’ books for thinking about, writing on, and teaching major works of SFF” (viii). In spite of its title, however, the diversity of offerings so far would seem to discourage conventional canon-building. It is difficult to cram (among others titles) Alfred Bester’s The Stars My Destination (1956), Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere (1996), Frank Herbert’s Dune (1965), BioWare’s media franchise Mass Effect (2007–), Robert Holdstock’s Mythago Wood (1984), Janelle Monáe’s Afrofuturist album project Dirty Computer (2018), and Jeff Noon’s Vurt (1993) into a single “type” of sf/f worthy of canonization. On the other hand, it is difficult to ignore the series’ subtitle: if nothing else and in very different ways, each of these can lay claim to being a “major work.” As the only novel ever to win the trifecta of major sf awards—the Arthur C. Clarke, the Hugo, and the Nebula—Leckie’s Ancillary Justice (2013) is both very well known and well worth the extended focus of Higgins’s Companion. Equally, this Companion more than does justice to Leckie’s novel. The title of one section in Higgins’s introduction, “The Problem of Empire,” is at the core of this astute and entertaining reading; it also extends the post-colonial work of his award-winning Reverse Colonization: Science Fiction, Imperial Fantasy, and Alt-Victimhood (2021). Each of the chapters following the introduction circles back to this “problem”: chapter 2 on “Gender and Coloniality,” chapter 3 on “Empire, Economics, and Addiction,” chapter 4 on “Race, Citizenship, and Imperial Personhood,” and chapter 5 on “Cynical Reason and Revolutionary Agency.” Higgins’s “central argument . . . is that Ancillary Justice offers a multitude of critical interventions that culminate in a devastating rebuke to the political, social, cultural, and economic injustices of American imperialism during the post-9/11 era and beyond” (10). For this reason, his Companion emphasizes the novel’s allegorical features, as both an estranged mirror and a critical reassessment of the historical and contemporary conditions of US imperialism. Higgins opens by examining the novel’s “speculative defamiliarization of gender” (13), focusing on Leckie’s contentious use of “she” and “her” as universal pronouns in the Radch Empire. Higgins notes how this one small change serves to unlink sexed bodies from the performances of gender, recalling Judith Butler’s analysis in her Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (1990). As he explains, “Radchaai enjoy a profound [End Page 487] freedom from the endless restrictive categorizations that gender creates in countless real-world contexts” (21). At the same time, however, he emphasizes the imperial arrogance behind the Radch empire’s failure to recognize the importance of gender differences in so many of the other cultures that they have so violently absorbed. Higgins shows how even Breq, the novel’s first-person point-of-view protagonist, “can get away with misgendering people” because she is a representative of empire (25). 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In spite of its title, however, the diversity of offerings so far would seem to discourage conventional canon-building. It is difficult to cram (among others titles) Alfred Bester’s The Stars My Destination (1956), Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere (1996), Frank Herbert’s Dune (1965), BioWare’s media franchise Mass Effect (2007–), Robert Holdstock’s Mythago Wood (1984), Janelle Monáe’s Afrofuturist album project Dirty Computer (2018), and Jeff Noon’s Vurt (1993) into a single “type” of sf/f worthy of canonization. On the other hand, it is difficult to ignore the series’ subtitle: if nothing else and in very different ways, each of these can lay claim to being a “major work.” As the only novel ever to win the trifecta of major sf awards—the Arthur C. Clarke, the Hugo, and the Nebula—Leckie’s Ancillary Justice (2013) is both very well known and well worth the extended focus of Higgins’s Companion. Equally, this Companion more than does justice to Leckie’s novel. The title of one section in Higgins’s introduction, “The Problem of Empire,” is at the core of this astute and entertaining reading; it also extends the post-colonial work of his award-winning Reverse Colonization: Science Fiction, Imperial Fantasy, and Alt-Victimhood (2021). Each of the chapters following the introduction circles back to this “problem”: chapter 2 on “Gender and Coloniality,” chapter 3 on “Empire, Economics, and Addiction,” chapter 4 on “Race, Citizenship, and Imperial Personhood,” and chapter 5 on “Cynical Reason and Revolutionary Agency.” Higgins’s “central argument . . . is that Ancillary Justice offers a multitude of critical interventions that culminate in a devastating rebuke to the political, social, cultural, and economic injustices of American imperialism during the post-9/11 era and beyond” (10). For this reason, his Companion emphasizes the novel’s allegorical features, as both an estranged mirror and a critical reassessment of the historical and contemporary conditions of US imperialism. Higgins opens by examining the novel’s “speculative defamiliarization of gender” (13), focusing on Leckie’s contentious use of “she” and “her” as universal pronouns in the Radch Empire. Higgins notes how this one small change serves to unlink sexed bodies from the performances of gender, recalling Judith Butler’s analysis in her Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (1990). As he explains, “Radchaai enjoy a profound [End Page 487] freedom from the endless restrictive categorizations that gender creates in countless real-world contexts” (21). At the same time, however, he emphasizes the imperial arrogance behind the Radch empire’s failure to recognize the importance of gender differences in so many of the other cultures that they have so violently absorbed. Higgins shows how even Breq, the novel’s first-person point-of-view protagonist, “can get away with misgendering people” because she is a representative of empire (25). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

书评:安妮·莱基的《辅助司法:一个重要的伴侣》,作者:大卫·m·希金斯,维罗妮卡·霍林格。优秀短篇奖学金。大卫·m·希金斯。安妮·莱基的《辅助司法:批判的伴侣》。帕尔格雷夫·麦克米伦,《帕尔格雷夫科幻与幻想:新佳能》,2023年出版。Vii +92页,精装版44.99美元,电子书34.99美元。[页486]帕尔格雷夫的《新正典》是越来越多的致力于短小批判研究的优秀学术丛书之一。可以把它们看作是批判性学术的中篇小说。大卫·希金斯的《批判同伴》是安妮·莱基广受欢迎的《帝国拉奇》三部曲的第一部,也是帕尔格雷夫“新佳能”系列的最新作品。用系列编辑Keren Omry和Sean Guynes的话来说,它“旨在提供思考、写作和教授SFF主要作品的‘首选’书籍”(viii)。然而,尽管它的标题如此,迄今为止提供的多样性似乎阻碍了传统的经典构建。很难把Alfred Bester的《The Stars My Destination》(1956)、Neil Gaiman的《Neverwhere》(1996)、Frank Herbert的《Dune》(1965)、BioWare的媒体系列《质量效应》(2007 -)、Robert Holdstock的《Mythago Wood》(1984)、Janelle Monáe的非洲未来主义专辑《Dirty Computer》(2018)和Jeff Noon的《urt》(1993)塞进一个值得被册册化的科幻小说“类型”中。另一方面,我们很难忽视这个系列的副标题:如果没有别的,以非常不同的方式,每一个都可以称得上是“主要作品”。作为唯一一部获得三大科幻大奖——阿瑟·c·克拉克奖、雨果奖和星云奖——的小说,莱基的《辅助司法》(2013)既广为人知,也值得希金斯的《伴侣》进一步关注。同样地,这本《伴侣》也比莱基的小说更公正。在希金斯的引言中,有一个章节的标题是“帝国的问题”,这是这本机敏而有趣的阅读的核心;它还延伸了他获奖的后殖民作品《反向殖民:科幻、帝国幻想和另类受害者》(2021)。引言之后的每一章都围绕着这个“问题”展开:第二章关于“性别和殖民”,第三章关于“帝国、经济和成瘾”,第四章关于“种族、公民身份和帝国人格”,第五章关于“愤世嫉俗的理性和革命机构”。希金斯的“中心论点……《辅助司法》提供了大量的批判性干预,最终对后9/11时代及以后美帝国主义的政治、社会、文化和经济不公正进行了毁灭性的谴责。出于这个原因,他的同伴强调了小说的寓言特征,既是一个疏远的镜子,也是对美帝国主义历史和当代状况的批判性重新评估。希金斯以审视小说“对性别的思辨陌生感”(13)开篇,重点关注莱基在《拉奇帝国》中将“她”和“她”作为通用代词的争议性使用。希金斯注意到这个小小的变化是如何将性别化的身体从性别的表现中分离出来的,并回顾了朱迪思·巴特勒在她的《性别问题:女权主义和身份的颠覆》(1990)中的分析。正如他所解释的那样,“Radchaai享受着一种深刻的自由,不受性别在无数现实环境中创造的无休止的限制性分类的影响”(21)。然而,与此同时,他强调了拉德奇帝国未能认识到性别差异在他们如此猛烈地吸收的许多其他文化中的重要性背后的帝国傲慢。希金斯表明,即使是小说的第一人称视角的主人公布雷克,也“可以摆脱性别错误的人”,因为她是帝国的代表(25)。在关于“性别的殖民性”(26)的讨论中,他得出结论:“即使……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Anne Leckie’s Ancillary Justice: A Critical Companion by David M. Higgins (review)
Reviewed by: Anne Leckie’s Ancillary Justice: A Critical Companion by David M. Higgins Veronica Hollinger Excellent Short-form Scholarship. David M. Higgins. Anne Leckie’s Ancillary Justice: A Critical Companion. Palgrave Macmillan, Palgrave Science Fiction and Fantasy: A New Canon, 2023. vii+92 pp. $44.99 hc, $34.99 ebk. [End Page 486] Palgrave’s “A New Canon” is one of a growing number of very good scholarly series devoted to short critical studies. Examples include University of Minnesota Press’s “Forerunners” (e.g., Steven Shaviro’s No Speed Limit: Three Essays on Accelerationism [2015]), the Association for Asian Studies’ “Asia Shorts” (e.g., Jing Jiang’s Found in Translation: “New People” in Twentieth-Century Chinese Science Fiction [2021]), and MIT’s “Essential Knowledge” series (e.g., Sherryl Vint’s Science Fiction [2021]). Think of them as the novellas of critical scholarship. David Higgins’s “critical companion” to the first novel of Anne Leckie’s immensely popular Imperial Radch trilogy is the latest in Palgrave’s “New Canon” series. In the words of series editors Keren Omry and Sean Guynes, it “aims to offer ‘go-to’ books for thinking about, writing on, and teaching major works of SFF” (viii). In spite of its title, however, the diversity of offerings so far would seem to discourage conventional canon-building. It is difficult to cram (among others titles) Alfred Bester’s The Stars My Destination (1956), Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere (1996), Frank Herbert’s Dune (1965), BioWare’s media franchise Mass Effect (2007–), Robert Holdstock’s Mythago Wood (1984), Janelle Monáe’s Afrofuturist album project Dirty Computer (2018), and Jeff Noon’s Vurt (1993) into a single “type” of sf/f worthy of canonization. On the other hand, it is difficult to ignore the series’ subtitle: if nothing else and in very different ways, each of these can lay claim to being a “major work.” As the only novel ever to win the trifecta of major sf awards—the Arthur C. Clarke, the Hugo, and the Nebula—Leckie’s Ancillary Justice (2013) is both very well known and well worth the extended focus of Higgins’s Companion. Equally, this Companion more than does justice to Leckie’s novel. The title of one section in Higgins’s introduction, “The Problem of Empire,” is at the core of this astute and entertaining reading; it also extends the post-colonial work of his award-winning Reverse Colonization: Science Fiction, Imperial Fantasy, and Alt-Victimhood (2021). Each of the chapters following the introduction circles back to this “problem”: chapter 2 on “Gender and Coloniality,” chapter 3 on “Empire, Economics, and Addiction,” chapter 4 on “Race, Citizenship, and Imperial Personhood,” and chapter 5 on “Cynical Reason and Revolutionary Agency.” Higgins’s “central argument . . . is that Ancillary Justice offers a multitude of critical interventions that culminate in a devastating rebuke to the political, social, cultural, and economic injustices of American imperialism during the post-9/11 era and beyond” (10). For this reason, his Companion emphasizes the novel’s allegorical features, as both an estranged mirror and a critical reassessment of the historical and contemporary conditions of US imperialism. Higgins opens by examining the novel’s “speculative defamiliarization of gender” (13), focusing on Leckie’s contentious use of “she” and “her” as universal pronouns in the Radch Empire. Higgins notes how this one small change serves to unlink sexed bodies from the performances of gender, recalling Judith Butler’s analysis in her Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (1990). As he explains, “Radchaai enjoy a profound [End Page 487] freedom from the endless restrictive categorizations that gender creates in countless real-world contexts” (21). At the same time, however, he emphasizes the imperial arrogance behind the Radch empire’s failure to recognize the importance of gender differences in so many of the other cultures that they have so violently absorbed. Higgins shows how even Breq, the novel’s first-person point-of-view protagonist, “can get away with misgendering people” because she is a representative of empire (25). In this discussion of “the coloniality of gender” (26), he concludes that “even though...
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