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引用次数: 0
摘要
兰斯顿·休斯(Langston Hughes)的《被推迟的梦的蒙太奇》(Montage of a Dream Deferred)观察了哈莱姆的悲伤和困难,但与其他作家关于这个社区的当代作品不同,他的诗歌抵制了二战后席卷美国的郊区冲动。《无所畏惧》(No Room for Fear)将蒙太奇解读为对战后反城市主义的回应,这种反城市主义将高密度的城市描绘成身体和道德传染病的场所,并将郊区生活视为一种“社会距离”的字面形式,以种族和核心家庭的名义将个人分开,以实现所谓的健康和福祉。这篇文章认为,蒙太奇颂扬哈莱姆的多样性,认为它是一种美好的东西,只有在社会抗议小说作家哀叹的拥挤条件下才有可能实现。最后考虑到休斯对城市主义的辩护在七十年后仍然具有现实意义,当郊区冲动的新版本鼓吹互联网而不是汽车是将纽约人从与自己不同的人的危险接近中“解放”出来的工具时。
“No Room for Fear”: Langston Hughes’s Defense of Urbanism
Langston Hughes’s Montage of a Dream Deferred observes Harlem’s griefs and difficulties, but unlike contemporary work about the neighborhood by other authors, his poetry resists the suburban impulse that swept the United States after World War II. “No Room for Fear” reads the Montage as a response to a postwar anti-urbanism that portrayed high-density cities as sites of physical and moral contagion, and exalted suburban living as a literal form of “social distance” that separated individuals by race and nuclear family of origin in the supposed interests of health and wellbeing. The article argues that Montage celebrates Harlem’s diversity as a good made possible only by the crowded conditions writers of social protest fiction deplored. It concludes by considering how Hughes’s defense of urbanism remains relevant seventy years later, when a new version of the suburban impulse trumpets the internet instead of the automobile as an instrument to “free” New Yorkers from dangerous proximity to people different from themselves.