Northern soulscape: Gerald Dawe, Angela Graham和Dara mccanulty的作品中贯穿英国脱欧的写作

Q4 Arts and Humanities
Porownania Pub Date : 2021-12-27 DOI:10.14746/por.2021.3.3
F. Ferguson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在全球流行病危机和气候变化危机可以说给不列颠和爱尔兰群岛的生活带来了足够多的挑战的时候,英国脱欧的实施又给不列颠和爱尔兰群岛带来了巨大的困难。边界、官僚机构和信仰体系消失了,就像臣民曾经对自己与国家或联盟的联系感到的确定性一样。或者出现新的边界和系统,带来笨拙的新协议和做法。货架空了,货物锁在集装箱里;陷入持有模式的又一网络零售新常态的惯性。混乱、恐惧和愤怒上升。可以说,英国脱欧混乱的震中位于北爱尔兰的中间地带。在这里,随着它与英国新划定的海上边界,以及它与爱尔兰共和国维持的欧盟关系,我们看到一个分裂和难以相处的社会,一如既往地在如何平衡对立的意识形态和国家野心与额外的混乱之间挣扎。在灾难的时刻,文学能做些什么?这个在《麻烦》(The Troubles)期间经常被提出的问题,在这个多重封锁的时期,再次痛苦地向作家、读者和评论家们反复提出。然而,如果检查在爱尔兰出版在过去的几年里,我们看到一个活跃的新闻界提供了一些有趣的回应文学的意义和功效,以回应当前的人类困境。在这篇文章中,我将研究三位当代作家的作品,他们是杰拉尔德·道、安吉拉·格雷厄姆和达拉·麦克纳尔蒂。我认为他们使用的类型(回忆录、短篇小说、自然日记)为北爱尔兰混乱的政治生活提供了一种新鲜而有力的回应。他们以各自不同的方式挑战北爱尔兰这个固定的、静态的、不可渗透的政治回音室。Dawe,我认为,通过他的自传体作品寻求一种方法来追溯该省历史上的时间和空间,并阐明解释过去的另一种方式。他能够从他自己和贝尔法斯特更广泛的故事中经常被忽视的可能性中获得支持和恢复。就格雷厄姆而言,我认为她大胆而自信的第一部短篇小说集对过去进行了尖锐而原始的审视,但也在面对创伤时提供了和解和真正希望的一瞥。最后,我将探讨mccanulty的工作。表面上看,他的书是一本日记,记录了他与大自然的接触,但实际上,他的书是一部杰作,将爱尔兰重新想象为一个被人类世蹂躏的地方,一个面临自闭症挑战的年轻人惊人地赋予了生命。部分是回忆录,部分是对自然的赞歌,这是一部了不起的成年非小说作品,它与道和格雷厄姆的作品一起表明,北爱尔兰文学为我们当前面临的地方和全球灾难提供了广泛而精彩的反驳。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Northern Soulscapes: Writing through Brexit in the work of Gerald Dawe, Angela Graham and Dara McAnulty
At a time of when the global crises of pandemic and climate change could be said to offer sufficient challenges to life in the British and Irish Isles, the implementation of Brexit provides a further gargantuan difficulty. Borders, bureaucracies and belief systems dissolve like the certainty that subjects once felt to their connection to states or Unions. Or new borders and systems appear, bringing with them unwieldy new protocols and practices. Shelves empty, goods sit locked in containers; caught up in the holding pattern of another new normal of online retail inertia. Dislocation, fear and anger rise. The epicentre of the Brexit shambles can be said to be located in the ever betwixt and between location of Northern Ireland. Here with its newly imposed sea border with Great Britain and its maintenance of European Union relations with the Republic of Ireland we see a fractured and fractious society struggling as ever to come to terms with how to balance the aspiration of opposing ideologies and national ambitions with an additional level of chaos. In a time of catastrophe what can literature do? This question, often posed during “The Troubles” has very much come back to be painfully reiterated to writers, readers and critics at a time of multiple lockdowns. However, if an examination is made of publishing in Ireland in the last couple of years, we see a buoyant press offering a number of intriguing responses to the significance and efficacy of literature to respond to the current human predicament. In this article I will examine the work of three contemporary writers, Gerald Dawe, Angela Graham, and Dara McAnulty. I will argue that their use of genre (memoir, short story, nature diary) provides a fresh and robust response to the chaotic present of Northern Irish political life. In their separate ways they contest the fixed, static and impermeable political echo chamber of Northern Ireland. Dawe, I contend, seeks a means through his autobiographical work to retrace time and space in the history of the province and articulate alternative ways of interpreting the past. He is able to draw sustenance and restoration from often overlooked times of possibility in his own and the wider story of Belfast. In Graham’s case, I would suggest that her bold and assertive first collection of short stories provides an acerbic and raw inspection of the past but one that also provides glimpses of reconciliation and genuine hope in the face of trauma. I conclude by exploring the work of McAnulty. Ostensibly a diary that traces his engagements with nature, his book is a tour de force that reimagines Ireland as a location gripped in the ravages of the Anthropocene startlingly brought to life by a young man faced with the challenges of autism. Part memoir, part praise poem to nature, it is a remarkable coming of age non-fiction work, which along with Dawe’s and Graham’s writing suggests that Northern Irish literature offers a broad and brilliant retort to the current local and global calamities that we face.
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来源期刊
Porownania
Porownania Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: The 2019 tercentenary of the publication of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe provides the perfect opportunity to reconsider the global status of the Robinsonade as a genre. Its translations, transformations, and a gradual separation from the founding text by Daniel Defoe have revealed its truly international character, with the term ‘Robinsonade’ itself first used in the German literary tradition and the most enduring narrative structure established not so much by Defoe himself but by J.J. Rousseau and his commentary on Robinson Crusoe in Emile; or, On Education. This issue will address the circulation of the Robinsonade across cultures and national contexts, the adaptability of the form and its potential to speak to various audiences at different historical moments. We invite contributions on all aspects of the afterlives of the Robinsonade across languages and media, with a particular interest in contemporary variations on the theme.
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