再现与再利用:本·勒纳10:04的气候现实主义策划

Matthew Lear
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引用次数: 0

摘要

根据最近的批评,现实主义被认为过于扎根于当下,无法理解气候灾难的潜在影响,也无法想象对巨大的生态变化做出新的政治和组织反应。相反,以未来为导向的科幻小说更适合回答气候变化带来的问题。本文指出,关注遥远的未来和倾向于反乌托邦和灾难性的文化叙事是危险的,这篇文章对这一论点提出了挑战。它与当代人文和科学领域对“气候现实主义”的呼吁一致,并表明现实主义和有效的未来思考之间没有如此明确的界限。本·勒纳(Ben Lerner)的《10:04》(2014)是一部现实主义小说,讲述了气候变化带来的影响。然而,批评在很大程度上未能将小说中的展览空间视为生态思考的舞台。这篇文章将小说作为一个策展项目,一个展览空间本身,重新呈现艺术作品,重新利用诗歌。它认为,勒纳玩弄文化文物的真实传记,将多个未来气候历史与正在展开的现在联系起来。此外,我还认为,这种重新定位所促进的互文、可互换的阅读实践,虽然植根于现实,但强调了读者在文本内外决定未来的代理。更广泛地说,这篇论文引出了气候现实主义的文化形式如何随着气候变化的发展而“保持”,强调了这种活力的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Re-Presentation and Repurposing: Curating Climate Realism in Ben Lerner's 10:04

Re-Presentation and Repurposing: Curating Climate Realism in Ben Lerner's 10:04

Realism, according to recent criticism, is deemed as too rooted in the present, unable to comprehend the potential effects of climatic disaster and imagine new political and organisational responses to vast ecological changes. Instead, the future-orientated genre of science fiction is much better suited to answering the questions that climate change presents. Citing the dangers of focusing on a far-flung future and on cultural narratives that tend towards the dystopian and catastrophic, this article challenges this contention. It concurs with contemporary calls across the humanities and sciences for ‘climate realism’ and suggests that there is no such firm boundary between realism and effective future thinking. Ben Lerner's 10:04 (2014) is a realist novel that grapples with the unfolding impacts of climate change. Yet, criticism has largely failed to consider exhibition spaces in the novel as arenas for thinking ecologically. This article frames the novel as a curatorial project, an exhibition space itself, re-presenting artwork and re-purposing poetry. It argues that Lerner plays with the real biographies of cultural artefacts to join multiple future climate histories to an unfolding present. Furthermore, I also argue that the intertextual, interchangeable reading practice promoted by such repurposing, though rooted in reality, emphasises the agency of the reader in determining a future both inside and outside the text. This paper, more broadly, elicits how cultural forms of climate realism can ‘stay with’ climate change as it unfolds, stressing the importance of such dynamism.

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