“无法形容的”气候:埃德加·爱伦·坡对南塔开特的阿瑟·戈登·皮姆的叙述中的生态恐怖

Megan Cole
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当代生态批评和美国哥特传统都在精神上压抑潜伏在语言表达之外的恐怖。例如,阿米塔夫·高希(Amitav Ghosh)认为化石燃料的历史是“一件近乎无法言说的尴尬事情”,蒂莫西·莫顿(Timothy Morton)认为生态灾难是“一个我们无法掌握的神秘实体”,这两者都在当代环境话语的框架内援引了哥特式最臭名昭著的惯例——不可代表的、黑暗的、笼罩着的、隐约可见的。然而,哥特的本质提醒我们,压抑和否认往往只会加强被埋葬的对象,而不是消灭它。从认识论的角度来看,当代文学评论家是否可以通过拒绝直接代表来解决气候变化的“代表危机”?本文以爱伦·坡唯一出版的小说《阿瑟·戈登·皮姆的南塔开特》(1838)为主要研究对象,追溯了十九世纪早期生态批评与哥特话语的融合。我认为坡在整部小说中运用了哥特风格,间接地表达了围绕采掘、种植园农业、过度消费、全球贸易网络和生态末日而出现的“难以言喻”的环境焦虑。在明确阐述了坡的哥特小说的生态维度之后,我展示了传统的哥特修辞——包括隐喻、潜伏、秘密、遏制、黑暗、腐烂和最广义的“不可言说”——是如何影响当代文学对气候变化的批评方法的。(根据高希、莫顿和同时代人的说法)这些文学批评方法通常认为,生态灾难的叙事潜伏本质上排除了我们对环境危机的认识。然而,在坡的哥特小说中,“难以言喻”的恐怖和潜在的焦虑最终被表现得比模仿时更加明显。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Climate ‘Unspeakable’: Representing Eco-Horror in Edgar Allan Poe's Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket

Contemporary ecocriticism and the American Gothic tradition share an investment in the psychic repression of terrors lurking just beyond the articulable. Amitav Ghosh's assertion that the history of fossil fuels is ‘a matter of embarrassment verging on the unspeakable’ and Timothy Morton's conception of ecocatastrophe as ‘an uncanny entity that we cannot grasp’ both, for instance, invoke the Gothic's most infamous conventions—the unrepresentable, the dark, shrouded, and looming—within the framework of contemporary environmental discourse. However, the nature of the Gothic reminds us that repression and disavowal tend only to strengthen the buried object, not to extinguish it. Turning to this centuries-old tradition for epistemological direction, might contemporary literary critics solve climate change's ‘crisis of representation’ by refusing to privilege direct representation altogether? This paper traces the fusion of ecocritical and Gothic discourse to the early nineteenth century, taking as its primary object Poe's only published novel, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (1838). I argue that Poe deploys Gothic conventions throughout the novel to obliquely represent ‘Unspeakable’ environmental anxieties emerging around extractivism, plantation agriculture, overconsumption, global trade networks, and ecological apocalypse. After illuminating the explicitly ecological dimensions of Poe's Gothic fiction, I demonstrate how conventional Gothic tropes—including metaphor, latency, secrecy, containment, darkness, decay, and ‘the Unspeakable’ in its broadest sense—can inform contemporary literary-critical approaches to climate change, which (according to Ghosh, Morton, and contemporaries) often assume that the narrative latency of ecocatastrophe inherently precludes our recognition of environmental crisis. In Poe's Gothic fiction, however, ‘Unspeakable’ horrors and latent anxieties are eventually made even more blatantly manifest than they would be if they were represented mimetically.

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