美国中产阶级的“物性”

Hannah Grace Lanneau
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在本文中,我考察了安妮塔·卢斯的《绅士爱美人》和f·斯科特·菲茨杰拉德的《了不起的盖茨比》作为中庸文本批判和参与物质主义和消费主义的方式。比尔·布朗对文学“事物”的力量和意义的讨论(2003;16-17)作为一个框架,我通过它来分析这些小说中所描绘的中产阶级的双重“物性”——也就是说,对消费对象的同时投资和批判。为此,我在与盖茨比的对话中分析了《金发女郎》的印刷文化历史和内容(在学术研究中,它被广泛认为是一部中庸作品)(它并不总是被认为是一部中庸作品)。我认为,与其用高雅/低俗的范式来看待中产阶级,不如考虑中产阶级在大众消费文化中运作的方式,以及对这种文化的批评。由于美国中产阶级有着独特的社会经济历史,我论证了这些小说是如何通过将主人公与物质对象的接触作为其身份建构的中心,来解决美国身份的“物性”和“物”的美国性的。《盖茨比》和《金发女郎》通过叙事内容展示了事物的美国中庸品质,小说作为印刷品的历史反映了它们作为商品本身的流通。本文通过考察“中产阶级”一词的历史情境及其不断演变的定义,挑战了对“中产阶级”作为一种体裁的理解。本文还通过提出一种新的视角和另一种理解中产阶级文学的方法,邀请人们重新讨论中产阶级文学。我认为,这些小说代表了一个理想的重新进入讨论中产阶级,因为它们不同的印刷文化历史和它们在当今所代表的文化资本(或缺乏文化资本)。因此,本文追溯了这两部小说的印刷历史,同时分析了它们的接受历史,并对中间文学的概念进行了批评。再次转向这个术语的相互矛盾的定义,以提出对学术界中产阶级的更灵活的理解,应该能够解释20世纪早期中产阶级文学的持续吸引力,以及中产阶级本身作为一种有抱负的美学和消费主义伦理的发展方式,并在21世纪无处不在。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The “Thingness” of the American Middlebrow:
In this paper, I examine the ways in which Anita Loos’s Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby both critique and engage with materialism and consumerism as middlebrow texts. Bill Brown’s discussion of the power and meaning of “things” of literature (2003; 16-17) serves as a framework through which I analyze the double “thingness” of the middlebrow as depicted in these novels—that is, the simultaneous investment in and critique of consumer objects. To that end, I analyze both the print culture histories and content of Blondes (which is widely considered a middlebrow text in academic scholarship) in conversation with Gatsby (which is not always thought of as a middlebrow text). I argue that, rather than view middlebrow within a high/low brow paradigm, we should instead consider the ways in which the middlebrow operates with and within mass consumer culture as well as provides a critique of that culture. Because the American middlebrow has a distinct socioeconomic history, I demonstrate how these novels also grapple with the “thingness” of American identity and the Americanness of “things” by centering the protagonists’ engagement with material objects in the construction of their identities. Gatsby and Blondes demonstrate the middlebrow American quality of things through their narrative content, and the novels’ histories as print objects reflect their circulation as commercial things themselves. This article challenges understandings of the “middlebrow” as a genre unto itself by examining the historical situatedness of the term and its evolving definitions. This article also invites renewed conversation around the middlebrow by proposing a new perspective and an alternative approach to the understanding of middlebrow literature. I argue that these novels present an ideal re-entry into discussion of the middlebrow because of their disparate print culture histories and the cultural capital (or lack thereof) they signify in the present day. This article thus traces the print histories of these two novels alongside analyses of their reception histories and critiques the concept of a middlebrow literature, turning again to contradictory definitions of the term to suggest a more fluid understanding of the middlebrow in scholarship should be able to account both for the continuing appeal of early twentieth-century middlebrow literature and the ways in which the middlebrow itself as an aspirational aesthetic and consumerist ethic has evolved and is ubiquitous in the twenty-first century.
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