{"title":"Spectres des Monstres:作为数字小说的后现代主义、闹鬼学和爬行派叙事","authors":"Joe Ondrak","doi":"10.1386/HOST.9.2.161_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Horror has always been adaptable to developments in media and technology; this is clear in horror tales from Gothic epistolary novels to the ‘found footage’ explosion of the early 2000s via phantasmagoria and chilling radio broadcasts such as Orson Welles’ infamous\n War of the Worlds (1938). It is no surprise, then, that the firm establishment of the digital age (i.e. the widespread use of Web2.0 spaces the proliferation of social media and its integration into everyday life) has created venues not just for interpersonal communication, shared interests\n and networking but also the potential for these venues to host a new type of horror fiction: creepypasta. However, much of the current academic attention enjoyed by digital horror fiction and creepypasta has focused on digital media’s ability to remediate a ‘folk-like’ storytelling\n style and an emulation of word-of-mouth communication primarily associated with urban legends and folk tales. Here, I intend to argue that creepypasta should primarily be considered a form of digital fiction due to its ability to spread narratives in a way distinct to digital textuality and\n intrinsically linked to the affordances of digital media. In this article, I will treat creepypasta narratives as a genre specific to the form of digital fiction – specifically a ‘fourth generation’ of digital fiction – in which ‘the [social media] platform is\n a significant part of the aesthetic expression and the meaning potential’ of these stories. I will argue that the affordances of social media, and the way in which they are taken advantage of by creepypasta narratives situate the phenomenon as an example of post-postmodern storytelling\n that embodies traits of Jeffrey Nealon’s ‘Post-postmodernism’, Alan Kirby’s ‘Digimodernism’ and Timotheus Vermeulen and Robin van den Akker’s ‘Metamodernism’. I will suggest that this postpostmodern cultural turn works hand in hand with\n the resurgence of a cultural ‘hauntology’ to coalesce in creepypasta as a unique type of text. While creepypasta’s hauntological qualities have previously been noted by Line Henriksen, this article will explore a relationship between creepypasta and post-postmodernism that\n has not yet been acknowledged. Ultimately, I will attest that the above theories describe (sometimes overlapping) symptoms of an emerging cultural period that relate to creepypasta’s meaning potential and its formal and aesthetic properties. Observations from all three theories of a\n post-postmodern age coalesce in creepypasta narratives, from the specific qualities of digital textuality and the unique properties of different social media platforms on which these narratives are hosted (YouTube, Reddit, webforums and so on) to the metatextuality of creepypasta works and\n how they depart from and retain a dialogue with postmodern horror narratives. 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It is no surprise, then, that the firm establishment of the digital age (i.e. the widespread use of Web2.0 spaces the proliferation of social media and its integration into everyday life) has created venues not just for interpersonal communication, shared interests\\n and networking but also the potential for these venues to host a new type of horror fiction: creepypasta. However, much of the current academic attention enjoyed by digital horror fiction and creepypasta has focused on digital media’s ability to remediate a ‘folk-like’ storytelling\\n style and an emulation of word-of-mouth communication primarily associated with urban legends and folk tales. Here, I intend to argue that creepypasta should primarily be considered a form of digital fiction due to its ability to spread narratives in a way distinct to digital textuality and\\n intrinsically linked to the affordances of digital media. In this article, I will treat creepypasta narratives as a genre specific to the form of digital fiction – specifically a ‘fourth generation’ of digital fiction – in which ‘the [social media] platform is\\n a significant part of the aesthetic expression and the meaning potential’ of these stories. I will argue that the affordances of social media, and the way in which they are taken advantage of by creepypasta narratives situate the phenomenon as an example of post-postmodern storytelling\\n that embodies traits of Jeffrey Nealon’s ‘Post-postmodernism’, Alan Kirby’s ‘Digimodernism’ and Timotheus Vermeulen and Robin van den Akker’s ‘Metamodernism’. I will suggest that this postpostmodern cultural turn works hand in hand with\\n the resurgence of a cultural ‘hauntology’ to coalesce in creepypasta as a unique type of text. 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引用次数: 5
摘要
恐怖总是能适应媒体和技术的发展;从哥特式书信体小说到21世纪初通过幻景和令人毛骨悚然的广播广播(如奥逊·威尔斯臭名昭著的《世界大战》(1938))爆发的“发现镜头”,这一点在恐怖故事中都很明显。因此,毫不奇怪,数字时代的稳固建立(即Web2.0空间的广泛使用,社交媒体的激增及其融入日常生活)不仅为人际交流、共享兴趣和网络创造了场所,而且还为这些场所提供了举办一种新型恐怖小说的可能性:creepypasta。然而,目前学术界对数字恐怖小说和恐怖小说的关注主要集中在数字媒体修复“民间”叙事风格和模仿主要与城市传说和民间故事相关的口口相传的能力上。在这里,我想说的是,恐怖小说主要应该被视为数字小说的一种形式,因为它能够以一种不同于数字文本的方式传播叙事,并与数字媒体的功能有着内在的联系。在这篇文章中,我将把creepypasta叙事作为一种特定于数字小说形式的类型——特别是“第四代”数字小说——其中“(社交媒体)平台是这些故事的美学表达和意义潜力的重要组成部分”。我认为,社交媒体的支持,以及恐怖主义叙事利用社交媒体的方式,使这种现象成为后后现代叙事的一个例子,体现了杰弗里·尼隆(Jeffrey Nealon)的“后后现代主义”、艾伦·柯比(Alan Kirby)的“数字现代主义”、提莫提斯·维默伦(Timotheus Vermeulen)和罗宾·范·登·阿克(Robin van den Akker)的“元现代主义”特征。我认为,这种后后现代文化转向与文化“幽灵学”的复兴携手合作,将恐怖主义作为一种独特的文本类型结合在一起。虽然Line Henriksen之前已经注意到爬行式面食的鬼魅特质,但本文将探讨爬行式面食与后后现代主义之间尚未得到承认的关系。最后,我将证明上述理论描述了(有时是重叠的)新兴文化时期的症状,这些症状与蠕形面食的意义潜力及其形式和美学特性有关。后后现代时代的所有三种理论,从数字文本的特定品质和这些叙事所承载的不同社交媒体平台(YouTube、Reddit、网络论坛等)的独特属性,到creepypasta作品的元文本性,以及它们如何脱离并保持与后现代恐怖叙事的对话,都在creepypasta叙事中得到了融合。虽然文化景观仍在不断变化,后现代主义之后会发生什么尚未确定,但令人毛骨悚然的意大利面食叙事告诉我们,后后现代时代已经到来。
Spectres des Monstres: Post-postmodernisms, hauntology and creepypasta narratives as digital fiction
Horror has always been adaptable to developments in media and technology; this is clear in horror tales from Gothic epistolary novels to the ‘found footage’ explosion of the early 2000s via phantasmagoria and chilling radio broadcasts such as Orson Welles’ infamous
War of the Worlds (1938). It is no surprise, then, that the firm establishment of the digital age (i.e. the widespread use of Web2.0 spaces the proliferation of social media and its integration into everyday life) has created venues not just for interpersonal communication, shared interests
and networking but also the potential for these venues to host a new type of horror fiction: creepypasta. However, much of the current academic attention enjoyed by digital horror fiction and creepypasta has focused on digital media’s ability to remediate a ‘folk-like’ storytelling
style and an emulation of word-of-mouth communication primarily associated with urban legends and folk tales. Here, I intend to argue that creepypasta should primarily be considered a form of digital fiction due to its ability to spread narratives in a way distinct to digital textuality and
intrinsically linked to the affordances of digital media. In this article, I will treat creepypasta narratives as a genre specific to the form of digital fiction – specifically a ‘fourth generation’ of digital fiction – in which ‘the [social media] platform is
a significant part of the aesthetic expression and the meaning potential’ of these stories. I will argue that the affordances of social media, and the way in which they are taken advantage of by creepypasta narratives situate the phenomenon as an example of post-postmodern storytelling
that embodies traits of Jeffrey Nealon’s ‘Post-postmodernism’, Alan Kirby’s ‘Digimodernism’ and Timotheus Vermeulen and Robin van den Akker’s ‘Metamodernism’. I will suggest that this postpostmodern cultural turn works hand in hand with
the resurgence of a cultural ‘hauntology’ to coalesce in creepypasta as a unique type of text. While creepypasta’s hauntological qualities have previously been noted by Line Henriksen, this article will explore a relationship between creepypasta and post-postmodernism that
has not yet been acknowledged. Ultimately, I will attest that the above theories describe (sometimes overlapping) symptoms of an emerging cultural period that relate to creepypasta’s meaning potential and its formal and aesthetic properties. Observations from all three theories of a
post-postmodern age coalesce in creepypasta narratives, from the specific qualities of digital textuality and the unique properties of different social media platforms on which these narratives are hosted (YouTube, Reddit, webforums and so on) to the metatextuality of creepypasta works and
how they depart from and retain a dialogue with postmodern horror narratives. While the cultural landscape is still in flux and what will come after postmodernism has yet to be determined, creepypasta narratives tell us that a post-postmodern age has already arrived.