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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文从生态批评和石油批评的角度出发,论证了阿拉伯小说中奇幻美学和恐怖美学与生态意识和能量焦虑之间的重要联系。从以国家为基础的比较出发,认识到能源生态是如何类似地跨越主权边界的,它通过伊拉克作者Fāḍil al- ul - Azzāwī的Ākhir al- malal - ul - ikah(1992)和巴勒斯坦作者im l Ḥabībī的Sarāyā, bint al-ghūl(1991)来实现这一点。这些小说以基尔库克-海法石油管道的两端为背景,在作者的家乡城市,在几个星期内完成,在石油驱动的海湾战争(1990-1991)的头几个月里,他们暗示了这一点。通过幽灵、精灵、天使和僵尸,他们戏剧性地表现了石油现代性的情感、环境和社会动荡。
Abstract Contributing to the fields of eco- and petro-criticism, this article argues for significant connections in the Arabic novel between fantastical and uncanny aesthetics, on the one hand, and ecological awareness and energy anxiety on the other. Moving from nation-based comparisons, in recognition of how energy ecologies similarly traverse sovereign borders, it does so through Iraqi author Fāḍil al-ʿAzzāwī’s Ākhir al-malāʾikah (1992) and the Palestinian Imīl Ḥabībī’s Sarāyā, bint al-ghūl (1991). Set at either end of the Kirkuk-Haifa oil pipeline, in their authors’ home cities, these novels were completed within a few weeks of one another, during the first months of the petroleum-driven Gulf War (1990–1991), to which they allude. Through phantoms, jinn, angels, and zombies, they dramatize the emotional, environmental, and social disturbances of petro-modernity.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Arabic Literature (JAL) is the leading journal specializing in the study of Arabic literature, ranging from the pre-Islamic period to the present. Founded in 1970, JAL seeks critically and theoretically engaged work at the forefront of the field, written for a global audience comprised of the specialist, the comparatist, and the student alike. JAL publishes literary, critical and historical studies as well as book reviews on Arabic literature broadly understood– classical and modern, written and oral, poetry and prose, literary and colloquial, as well as work situated in comparative and interdisciplinary studies.