"过去并不在我们身后":维蒂-伊希玛拉小说中的战士-君主的复古托邦

Gerardo Rodríguez-Salas
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摘要

与人们对维提-伊希玛拉作品的非政治、悲观和非女权主义的看法相反,本文认为,他的早期小说《女族长》(1986 年)及其续篇《梦游者》(1997 年)将毛利社区描绘成一个古老的、父权制的空间,需要加以修正,以容纳妇女。本研究重新审视了部落主义以及毛利乌托邦和周期性土地叙事的作用,认为这两部小说中的忏悔式男性叙述者塔马泰亚-马哈纳(Tamatea Mahana)不仅学会了接受具有首领地位的强大毛利女性领袖的母系谱系,还学会了接受像他的母亲蒂安娜(Tiana)这样有魅力的影子女性的母系谱系。在帕克哈帝国民主和毛利人的 "男性统治乌托邦 "之外,塔马提亚和特殊的战士-族长长廊实现了一种奇特的、有争议的复古乌托邦--回归过去被过早埋葬的伟大思想--即使是在危险的怀旧共鸣中,它也旨在通过螺旋式的时间性建立一种开放式的民主模式。1 主要采用非殖民化理论和方法,借鉴了考帕帕毛利理论和马纳-瓦欣理论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“The past does not lie behind us”: Warrior-matriarchs’ retrotopia in Witi Ihimaera’s fiction
Contrary to an apolitical, pessimistic, and non-feminist perception of Witi Ihimaera’s work, this article contends that his early novel The Matriarch (1986) and its sequel The Dream Swimmer (1997) frame Māori communities as an ancient, patriarchal space in need of revision to accommodate women. Reconsidering the role of tribalism and Māori utopian and cyclical land narratives, this study argues that the confessional male narrator of both novels, Tamatea Mahana, learns to embrace a matrilineal genealogy not only of powerful Māori women leaders of chiefly status, but also of charismatic women in the shadow, like his mother Tiana. Beyond Pākehā imperial democracy and Māori “male utopias of domination”, Tamatea and the exceptional gallery of warrior-matriarchs implement a peculiar and controversial retrotopia — a return to the prematurely buried grand ideas of the past — which, even when dangerously resonating with nostalgia, aims at an open-ended model of democracy through spiral temporality. 1 A predominantly decolonizing theory and methodology is used, drawing on Kaupapa Māori and Mana Wāhine theories.
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