“两个帝国的儿子”:澳新军团与加里波利战役土耳其诗歌中的国家观念

IF 0.3 Q4 CULTURAL STUDIES
Burçin Çakir, Berkan Ulu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1915年的加里波利战役(Gallipoli Campaign)是盟军的一次意外失败和土耳其人的一次重大胜利,被认为是澳大利亚人和新西兰人在脱离大英帝国的道路上首次值得注意的经历。对于厌战的土耳其人来说,加里波利之战的胜利也是他们从一个残破的帝国向现代共和国转型的开始。尽管对这场战役的军事、政治和历史方面有大量的研究,但对加里波利的文学研究却很少,而且往往是从单一的角度来研究鲁珀特·布鲁克(Rupert Brooke)等被封为圣徒的诗人或国家关注的问题。本文对加里波利的英、土两种不为人知的诗歌进行了比较研究,旨在揭示加里波利不为人知的诗人。在此过程中,该研究追踪了澳大利亚、新西兰和土耳其国家建设过程的迹象,并强调了国家认同。为此,本文采用细读分析的方法,研究了一些由战斗诗人或非战斗诗人创作的英语和土耳其语的加里波利诗歌,以寻找话语和语气的变化。这项研究还强调了双方诗人是如何认同自己的,以及这场运动是如何在这些诗歌中反映出来的。最后,这项研究表明,加利波利的诗歌对属于一个帝国的想法表现出类似的态度,尽管它们在看待战争的方式上有所不同。本文着重于不太知名的诗歌,并作为加里波利战役诗歌的少数比较研究之一,将有助于当前对第一次世界大战遗产和文学的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Sons of Two Empires”: The Idea of Nationhood in Anzac and Turkish Poems of the Gallipoli Campaign
An unexpected failure of the Allied forces and a monumental victory for the Turks, the Gallipoli Campaign (1915) is thought to be the first notable experience for Australians and New Zealanders on their way to identify themselves as nations free from the British Empire. For the war-weary Turks, too, the victory in Gallipoli was the beginning of their transformation from a wreck of an empire to a modern republic. Despite the existence of a substantial body of research on the military, political, and historical aspects of the campaign, studies on the literature of Gallipoli are very few and often deal with canonised poets such as Rupert Brooke or national concerns through a single perspective. Aiming to bring to light underappreciated poets from Gallipoli, this paper is a comparative study of less known poems in English and Turkish from Gallipoli. While doing this, the study traces the signs of the nation-building processes of Australia, New Zealand, and Turkey with emphasis on national identity. To this end, the paper examines a number of Gallipoli poems in English and Turkish that were composed by combatant or non-combatant poets by using close reading analysis in search of shifts in discourse and tone. The study also underlines how poets from the two sides identified themselves and the ways the campaign is reflected in these poems. At length, the study shows that Gallipoli poems display similar attitudes towards the idea of belonging to an empire although they differ in the way warfare is perceived. With emphasis on less known poems and as one of the very few comparative studies of the poetry of the Gallipoli Campaign, this paper will contribute to the current research into the legacy and literature of the First World War.
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来源期刊
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
28 weeks
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