IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES
Agata Szczeszak-Brewer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文将乔伊斯作品中的流亡者、LÉ詹姆斯·乔伊斯的救援任务与21世纪的难民联系起来。乔伊斯的《尤利西斯》作为对流亡的思考,被广泛而包容地理解,预示并预测了当代爱尔兰、欧洲其他地区和其他地方的难民危机。在《尤利西斯》和其他作品中,乔伊斯将神话中的流浪者(奥德修斯-斯蒂芬、特勒马科斯-布鲁姆)与历史上的流亡者(犹太流亡者、爱尔兰移民)联系起来,将我们的注意力引向世纪之交爱尔兰仇外言论中对污染的隐喻。《尤利西斯》和《芬尼根守灵夜》试图接近文化和语言位移的状况。多语言、多形式和多声音的叙述反映了流离失所者的生活经历,对他们来说,沟通往往意味着生存。然而,这篇文章要求对流亡和移民的语言进行谨慎的使用。在二十世纪犹太流亡者的经历或来自索马里、厄立特里亚、叙利亚、阿富汗(或现在的乌克兰)的难民的背景下讨论乔伊斯的自愿东迁,是为了减少真正流亡难民的人道主义危机和痛苦。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
LÉ James Joyce's Exiles
ABSTRACT:This essay draws connections between exiles in Joyce's texts, LÉ James Joyce's rescue missions, and twenty-first-century refugees. Joyce's Ulysses, as a meditation on exile understood expansively and inclusively, foreshadows and anticipates the contemporary refugee crises in Ireland, the rest of Europe, and elsewhere. In Ulysses and other works, Joyce links mythological wanderers (Odysseus-Stephen, Telemachus-Bloom) with historical exiles (the Jewish diaspora, Irish emigrants), bringing our attention to the metaphor of contamination in xenophobic rhetoric in turn-of-the-century Ireland. Ulysses and Finnegans Wake attempt to approximate the condition of cultural and linguistic displacement. The multi-lingual, multi-form, and multivoiced narratives echo the lived experiences of displaced people for whom communication often means survival. Nevertheless, the essay calls for a careful use of language about exile and migration. To discuss Joyce's voluntary migrations East in the context of the experiences of the Jewish diaspora in the twentieth century or the refugees from Somalia, Eritrea, Syria, Afghanistan—or now Ukraine—is to diminish the humanitarian crises and suffering of true exile-refugees.
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来源期刊
JAMES JOYCE QUARTERLY
JAMES JOYCE QUARTERLY LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES-
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Founded in 1963 at the University of Tulsa by Thomas F. Staley, the James Joyce Quarterly has been the flagship journal of international Joyce studies ever since. In each issue, the JJQ brings together a wide array of critical and theoretical work focusing on the life, writing, and reception of James Joyce. We encourage submissions of all types, welcoming archival, historical, biographical, and critical research. Each issue of the JJQ provides a selection of peer-reviewed essays representing the very best in contemporary Joyce scholarship. In addition, the journal publishes notes, reviews, letters, a comprehensive checklist of recent Joyce-related publications, and the editor"s "Raising the Wind" comments.
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