《工业启示录》——盖斯凯尔《南北》中的政治启示录

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Joseph M Otero
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文在古代启示录文学传统的背景下,在维多利亚时代的文学和历史背景下,研究了伊丽莎白·盖斯凯尔1854年至1855年的小说《北方与南方》中的宗教内容。引起这种对比的是贝西·希金斯这个角色,一个身患绝症的工厂女裁缝,她引用了《启示录》,并报告了一些实际价值的预言梦。通过将这种不合时宜的启示录声音置于工业城市背景下的贫困工人中,盖斯凯尔影响了启示录类型的原始政治功能的回归:为被剥夺公民权的底层阶级辩护。本文以基督教和前基督教时代的古代为例,建立了《启示录》文学的一般特征,因为它们与它的政治功能有关,并确定了盖斯凯尔的文本与之一致的关键点。尽管盖斯凯尔并没有完全复制这种类型的形式,《南方与北方》是一部小说,而不是一个梦境,但她仍然使用贝西这个角色,将世界末日的概念、形象、论点和修辞融入到她对19世纪阶级斗争的现实主义叙述中。其结果是对资产阶级的控诉,将他们与《约翰启示录》中义人被清除后暂时继承地球的罪人相提并论。本文的最后一部分进一步将贝西·希金斯置于与南方和北方同时代的卫理公会传统中,以及盖斯凯尔交叉的宗教和政治观点中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘An Industrial Revelation’ – The Political Apocalyptic in Gaskell’s North and South
This essay examines the religious contents of Elizabeth Gaskell’s 1854–1855 novel, North and South, within the context of Apocalyptic literary traditions from Antiquity, and in the literary and historical contexts accessible to Victorians. Inviting this comparison is the character Bessy Higgins, a terminally ill factory seamstress who quotes the Book of Revelation and reports prophetic dreams of some actual merit. By placing this anachronistically apocalyptic voice amid the working poor of her industrial urban setting, Gaskell effects a return to the original political function of the Apocalyptic genre: the vindication of a disenfranchised underclass. Drawing upon examples from Christian and pre-Christian Antiquity, this essay establishes the generic features of Apocalyptic literature as they pertain to its political function, and identifies key points at which Gaskell’s text aligns with them. Though Gaskell does not replicate the genre’s form in full, North and South being a novel rather than a dream-vision, she nonetheless uses the character Bessy to incorporate apocalyptic concepts, images, arguments, and rhetoric into her otherwise realistic narrative of nineteenth-century class struggle. The result, coded in layers of Biblical reference, is an indictment of the capitalist class, comparing them to the sinners who temporarily inherit the Earth in the Apocalypse of John, after the righteous have been purged from it. The final part of this essay further contextualizes Bessy Higgins within the Methodist traditions contemporary to North and South, and within Gaskell’s intersecting religious and political views.
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