金·斯科特(Kim Scott)的《Benang: From The Heart》中的网格、(非)存在的诗学以及身份的困扰

IF 0.7 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Bonaventure Muzigirwa Munganga
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文旨在从金·斯科特的《贝南:发自内心》的土著本体认知观出发,探讨生态思维或万物之间的相互联系是如何保证存在和身份的诗学作为流动的、漂浮的、渗透的或泄漏的,而不是僵化的或确定的。它建立在网格和神秘美学的概念上,以及这种观点如何与土著开放的亲属关系,友谊,亲密关系和与其他生物的关系相协调。这样的观点使主人公哈利在物质和精神方面,通过与所有生物,人类和非人类,或整个国家的纠缠,重新获得了他被抹去的土著身份。这篇论文是我博士论文第四章的总结,在此我要感谢UNSW-Sydney研究生研究学院为我的博士培养提供了Scientia,这是最慷慨的Scientia奖学金。我还要感谢我的指导团队,brigita Olubas教授,Elizabeth McMahon教授和我的读者名誉教授Bill Ashcroft,从我的Scientia奖学金申请的初始阶段,到整个项目提案的发展,再到论文完成阶段,他们对我的工作给予了有力的反馈。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。bonaventure Muzigirwa Munganga获得了他的第一个英语学位(刚果民主共和国布卡武),然后是文学文体学硕士(英国伯明翰大学),刚刚完成了英国文学研究博士学位(悉尼新南威尔士大学)。主要研究方向为文学与文化理论与批评、美学与政治、哲学与文学。Bonaventure的博士论文是关于澳大利亚土著投机小说的,研究了所有生物之间的相互联系是如何影响这些文学的,以及文本的美学是如何保证它们作为人类和非人类纠缠的场所来阅读的。干预将文本置于土著本体论,认识论的背景下,以证实这些如何支撑文本的写作以及文本的美学如何反过来塑造我们对作者承诺的阅读和理解。论文最后将这些叙事中的生态思维与非洲认识论、宇宙论和相关的非洲文学档案进行了对话。这一目的塑造了博纳文蒂尔目前对比较黑人土著非洲和澳大利亚文化,文学和艺术的兴趣,并且更狭隘,重点关注认识论,(生态)美学和诗学,后人文主义,后殖民主义和非殖民化批评,以及这些领域之间可能的协同作用,以形成当代和其他(尚未命名)跨学科文学和文化研究途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The mesh, the poetics of (not)being and the hauntings of identity in Kim Scott’s Benang: From the Heart
ABSTRACTThis paper aims to establish how ecological thinking, or the idea of interconnectedness among all beings, from the Indigenous onto-epistemic view in Kim Scott’s Benang: From the Heart warrants a poetics of being and identity as fluid, floating, permeable, or leaking, never rigid or definitive. It builds on the idea of the mesh and the aesthetics of uncanny and how this view attunes to the Indigenous openness for kinship with, companionship of, intimacy and becoming with other beings. Such a view thus enacts Harley, the main protagonist, as regenerating his effaced Aboriginal identity through entanglements and becoming with all beings, humans and nonhumans, or Country at large, in both the latter’s material and spiritual aspects.KEYWORDS: Benangmeshpoetics of being and identify AcknowledgementsThis paper is a summary of the fourth chapter of my doctoral thesis and so I hereby wish to thank the UNSW-Sydney Graduate Research School for granting me the Scientia, most generous Scientia scholarship for my doctoral training. I wish to also thank my supervisory team, Professors Brigitta Olubas, Elizabeth McMahon and my reader Emeritus Professor Bill Ashcroft for their hard-hitting feedback on my work, from the initial stages of my Scientia scholarship application, throughout the development of the full project proposal, to the thesis completion stage.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Additional informationNotes on contributorsBonaventure Muzigirwa MungangaBonaventure Muzigirwa Munganga took his first degree in English (ISP/Bukavu, DR Congo), then an MA in Literary Stylistics (University of Birmingham, UK) and has just completed a PhD in English Literary Studies (UNSW, Sydney). His research interests broadly span Literary and Cultural Theory and Criticism, Aesthetics and Politics, and Philosophy and Literature. Bonaventure’s doctoral thesis was on Indigenous Australian Speculative Fiction and studied how the mesh or the idea of interconnectedness among all beings pollinates this literature, and how the texts’ aesthetics warrant their reading as sites of human and nonhuman entanglements. The intervention put the texts in the context of Indigenous ontologies, epistemologies to substantiate how these underpin the texts’ writing and how the texts’ aesthetics in turn shape our reading and understanding of the writers’ commitments. The thesis ended by bringing ecological thinking in these narratives in conversation with African epistemologies, cosmologies and the relevant African literary archives. This end shapes Bonaventure’s current, and much narrower, interest in Comparative Black Indigenous African and Australian Cultures, Literatures and Arts, with a focus on epistemologies, (eco)aesthetics and poetics, posthumanism, postcolonialism and decolonial critique, as well as the possible synergies among these areas to forge contemporary and other (yet to be named) interdisciplinary literary and cultural research avenues.
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来源期刊
Culture Theory and Critique
Culture Theory and Critique HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.20
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25.00%
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6
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