好地方 "的承诺:凯特-威廉的《葬礼》和石黑一雄的《永不让我走》中的乌托邦。

Derya Oruç
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引用次数: 0

摘要

乌托邦 "的反义词是 "反乌托邦",是指由极权主义政权统治的社会给人们带来恐惧和焦虑。在许多反乌托邦小说中,统治者的主要目的是按照自己的意识形态创造一个更美好的世界,他们相信自己正在创造一个 "乌托邦"。这种信念将社会一分为二:加入事业的人和反对事业的人。然而,最忠于这一事业的是所谓 "乌托邦 "的创造者和那些怕死的人。结果,"好地方 "的承诺取得了胜利,但却建立了一个被描绘成受压迫的、持续不幸福的社区。本文分析了凯特-威廉的短篇小说《葬礼》(1972 年)和石黑一雄的长篇小说《决不让我走》(2005 年)中发生的极权制度和恐惧、伪乌托邦和社会分裂等乌托邦元素,同时分析了个人和乌托邦社会。本文的目的是通过阿多诺和霍克海默的 "被管理的世界"、柏拉图的 "社会阶级"、路易斯-阿尔都塞的 "互称 "和 "镇压性国家机器 "以及他的 "意识形态国家机器"、米哈伊尔-巴赫金的 "权威语言"、米歇尔-福柯的 "监狱社会 "以及杰里米-边沁的 "泛视 "来研究这些文本中的乌托邦概念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A promise of ‘The Good Place’: Dystopia in Kate Wilhelm’s The Funeral and Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go.
Dystopia which is presumed to be the antonym of the word utopia instigates the idea that a given society is governed by a totalitarian regime in which constructs fear and anxiety to its people. In many dystopian texts, the main aim of the rulers is to create a better world according to their own ideologies by believing that they are creating a ‘utopia’. This conviction divides society into two; the ones who join the cause and the ones who are against it. However, the most loyal to the cause are the creators of the so called ‘utopia’ and the ones who are afraid to die. As a result, the promise of ‘the good place’ triumphs only to establish a community that is portrayed as oppressed with constant unhappiness. This article analyses both the individuals and the dystopian society while taking into consideration dystopian elements like totalitarian regime and fear, pseudo-utopia, and division in society that takes place in the short story The Funeral (1972) by Kate Wilhelm and the novel Never Let Me Go (2005) by Kazuo Ishiguro. The purpose of this article is to investigate the concept of dystopia in these texts by engaging Adorno and Horkheimer’s ‘administered world’, Plato’s ‘social classes’, Louis Althusser’s ‘interpellation’ and ‘Repressive State Apparatus’ along with his ‘Ideological State Apparatus’, Mihail Bakhtin’s ‘authoritative language’, and finally Michel Foucault’s ‘carceral society’ in connection with Jeremy Bentham’s ‘panopticon’.
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