安娜-诺斯的《亡命之徒》(评论)

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Sarah Nolan-Brueck
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To tell this story of communal and individual freedom, North departs from factual reporting in more than one way; bending the Western to her purposes, she creates an alternative history in which a bygone plague becomes a powerful point of departure. In lieu of the American Civil War, slavery collapses for the simple fact that the plague decimates the population and destroys the already crumbling system. Descendants of this generation have re-narrated the plague as a divine judgment, so that now all sicknesses are suspected to have a contagious, immoral cause—especially where reproduction is concerned.</p> <p>In this reimagined time and space, North creates a new origin story for gynecology and reproductive care, a reinvention that posits both gendered entrapment and radical resistance as transhistorical phenomena. This alternate path leaves the inner workings of the body in shadow, allowing the protagonist, Ada, to step into a gap in medical knowledge. 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In a moment when reproductive legislation is rapidly changing, North's reimagined Western allows the reader the double pleasure of escaping into another world and of imagining ways to better our own. <strong>[End Page 178]</strong></p> Sarah Nolan-Brueck University of Southern California Copyright © 2024 Western Literature Association ... </p>","PeriodicalId":23875,"journal":{"name":"Western American Literature","volume":"211 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Outlawed by Anna North (review)\",\"authors\":\"Sarah Nolan-Brueck\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/wal.2024.a937409\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Outlawed</em> by Anna North <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Sarah Nolan-Brueck </li> </ul> Anna North. <em>Outlawed</em>. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 安娜-诺斯的《亡命》 莎拉-诺兰-布鲁克 安娜-诺斯。亡命之徒》。伦敦:布鲁姆斯伯里出版社,2021 年。272页。安娜-诺斯(Anna North)的《亡命》(Outlawed)是在性别重构和立法威胁日益加剧的当下,一剂强烈而急需的趣味药剂。诺斯是 Vox 的资深记者,经常撰写有关生殖健康和政治以及国家对家庭立场转变的文章。她的小说以 1894 年的美国西部为背景,但这里的景色并不熟悉。为了讲述这个关于社区和个人自由的故事,诺斯在很多方面都偏离了事实报道;为了达到她的目的,她对西部进行了改造,创造了另一种历史,其中一场逝去的瘟疫成为了一个强有力的出发点。代替美国内战的是奴隶制的崩溃,原因很简单,瘟疫消灭了人口,摧毁了已经摇摇欲坠的制度。这一代人的后代将瘟疫重新叙述为神的审判,因此现在所有的疾病都被怀疑有传染性、不道德的原因--尤其是涉及到生殖的疾病。在这一重新想象的时空里,诺斯为妇科和生殖护理创造了一个新的起源故事,这一重塑将性别禁锢和激进反抗都视为跨历史现象。这条另辟蹊径的道路为身体的内部运作留下了阴影,让主人公艾达走进了医学知识的空白地带。艾达是一名正在接受培训的年轻白人助产士。作为助产士的女儿和事实上的助手,艾达对女性的恐怖、权力和物质血腥世界了如指掌,而在她所处的社会中,很少有人愿意看到这些。在小说的开头,艾达在结婚后发现自己无法怀孕,而在一个沉迷于怀孕的社会中,无法生育使她备受怀疑。艾达试图在这个鄙视她的世界中找到自己的位置,她利用自己微薄的医学知识取得了巨大的效果--读者和小说中的人物都从中受益。[第 177 页尾)艾达没有接受本应是她唯一出路的修女隐居生活,而是选择了求知。她开始寻找一位隐居的助产士,这位助产士正在非法研究不孕症。为了达到目标,艾达需要一个独特的乌托邦集体的帮助:"墙洞帮",一个由其他不孕妇女和性别不符者组成的天才团队。正是通过这群人,以及对西方传统的自我反思,诺斯创作出了一部既新颖又经典的叙事作品。在严酷的环境中,这伙人要与寒冷、饥饿和当地执法部门的入侵作斗争,执法部门要么强行将这些妇女送回她们的社区和适当的地方,要么利用她们进行示范性的暴力管教。艾达是一个稚嫩的孩子,她克服了重重困难,在经验丰富的成员中赢得了一席之地。艾达从(性别)亡命之徒那里学会了如何异装癖,如何像男人一样走路和说话,如何颠覆男性的权力,以及如何质疑关于她在社会中地位的既定叙事。在整部小说中,艾达被设定为与更准确、更令人不安的美国妇科史相对立,特别是 J. 马里恩-西姆斯(J. Marion Sims)的历史,他在 19 世纪中期对黑人被奴役妇女进行了实验。艾达多次利用她在现实世界中的经历,拒绝接受有关异族通婚和生育危险的教导。诺斯迫使我们在没有妇科知识的情况下审视那个时代的恐怖,拷问基于个人同情心和平等分配的治疗与创造并指导我们当前医疗实践的主宰模式之间的区别。小说同时从多个角度进行了探讨,既是对生殖问题的严肃处理,也是一部具有自我意识的普通漫游小说。在生殖立法瞬息万变的当下,诺斯重新想象的西方世界让读者享受到双重乐趣:既能逃离到另一个世界,又能想象如何改善我们自己的世界。[萨拉-诺兰-布鲁克(Sarah Nolan-Brueck) 南加州大学版权所有 © 2024 西部文学协会 ...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Outlawed by Anna North (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Outlawed by Anna North
  • Sarah Nolan-Brueck
Anna North. Outlawed. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021. 272 pages. Hardcover, $26; paper, $17.

Anna North's Outlawed is a strong and much needed dose of fun in a time when gender reification and legislation grow ever more threatening. North, a senior reporter at Vox, writes regularly about reproductive health and politics, as well as the state's shifting position to the family. Her novel is set in the US West in 1894, but its landscape is not a familiar one. To tell this story of communal and individual freedom, North departs from factual reporting in more than one way; bending the Western to her purposes, she creates an alternative history in which a bygone plague becomes a powerful point of departure. In lieu of the American Civil War, slavery collapses for the simple fact that the plague decimates the population and destroys the already crumbling system. Descendants of this generation have re-narrated the plague as a divine judgment, so that now all sicknesses are suspected to have a contagious, immoral cause—especially where reproduction is concerned.

In this reimagined time and space, North creates a new origin story for gynecology and reproductive care, a reinvention that posits both gendered entrapment and radical resistance as transhistorical phenomena. This alternate path leaves the inner workings of the body in shadow, allowing the protagonist, Ada, to step into a gap in medical knowledge. Ada is a young, white midwife-in-training. The midwife's daughter and de facto assistant, Ada is privy to a world of female terror, power, and material gore that few in her society care to see. After marrying early in the novel, Ada discovers that she can't get pregnant—and barrenness, in a society obsessed with pregnancy, marks her out for suspicion. Attempting to find her place in a world that despises her, Ada wields her small medical knowledge to great effect—to the benefit of both the reader and the characters in the novel. [End Page 177]

Rather than accept the cloistered life of a nun that should be her only recourse, Ada chooses a search for knowledge. She strikes out to find a reclusive midwife who is studying barrenness illegally. To reach her goal, Ada will need the help of a unique, utopian collective: the Hole-in-the-Wall gang, a talented crew of other barren women and gender nonconforming people. It is through the gang, and a self-reflexive use of Western tropes, that North crafts a narrative which feels both innovative and wholly classic. Out in a harsh landscape, the gang battles the cold, hunger, and the incursion of local law enforcement, who seek to either forcibly return the women to their communities and proper places or to use them for exemplary, violent discipline. Ada is the tenderfoot, who overcomes trials to earn her place among the more experienced members. From the (gender) outlaws Ada learns how to cross-dress, to walk and talk like a man, to subvert masculine power, and to question received narratives about her place in society.

Throughout the novel, Ada is set up in opposition to a more accurate and disturbing history of American gynecology—specifically, the history of J. Marion Sims, who experimented on Black enslaved women in the mid-1800s. Juxtaposed with a fictionalized version, the popular but racist Dr. Lively, Ada repeatedly uses her real-world experience to reject teachings about the dangers of interracial marriage and reproduction. Forcing us to view the horror of an era without the benefit of gynecological knowledge, North interrogates the difference between treatment based on personal compassion and equal distribution, and the mastery model that created and informs our current medical practice. The novel explores multiple angles at once, working as both a serious treatment of reproductive issues and a self-aware, generic romp. In a moment when reproductive legislation is rapidly changing, North's reimagined Western allows the reader the double pleasure of escaping into another world and of imagining ways to better our own. [End Page 178]

Sarah Nolan-Brueck University of Southern California Copyright © 2024 Western Literature Association ...

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来源期刊
Western American Literature
Western American Literature LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
50.00%
发文量
30
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