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引用次数: 1
摘要
摘要:本文以克里斯·阿巴尼(Chris Abani)的《拉斯维加斯秘史》(The Secret History of Las Vegas, 2014)为研究对象,认为分析那些采用流行小说或类型小说惯例的作品,对于理解当代非洲小说与全球化的物质现实互动和回应的复杂方式至关重要。例如,《密史》既援引又拒绝侦探小说中典型的认识论确定性。小说没有解决一个谜题,也没有描绘随后的回归秩序,而是提出了一种解释学怀疑主义的原则,这种原则与多样性、同时性和不连续性相适应。这一原则在另一部更知名的作品——Teju Cole的《开放之城》(Open City, 2011)中也得到了呼应,其主人公与《秘史》中的核心人物相似。总之,这些小说将历史呈现为一种痕迹、残余物和幽灵般的存在的积累,所有这些都在当下受到新的编码和扭曲。反过来,这些小说对历史和认识论的理论化,对全球化作为一种统一力量或同质化过程的叙述提出了异议,在这种叙述中,差异被消除以促进商品和资本的流动。在这样做的过程中,这些当代非洲小说通过将批判性的注意力转向构建当下的权力动态而变得“全球化”。
Secret Histories: Detective Fiction, Hermeneutic Skepticism, and Bad Readers in the Contemporary African Novel
Abstract:Focusing on Chris Abani’s The Secret History of Las Vegas (2014), this essay argues that analysis of works that enlist the conventions of popular or genre fiction is crucial for understanding the complex ways in which contemporary African novels engage with and respond to the material realities of globalization. Secret History, for instance, both invokes and refuses the epistemic certainties typically promised by the detective plot. In place of solving a mystery and depicting a subsequent return to order, the novel proffers a principle of hermeneutic skepticism that is attuned to multiplicity, simultaneity, and discontinuity. This principle is echoed in another, better-known work, Teju Cole’s Open City (2011), whose protagonist resembles the central character in Secret History. Together, these novels present history as an accumulation of traces, remainders, and ghostly presences, all of which are subject to new kinds of recoding and distortion in the present. The novels’ theorization of history and epistemology, in turn, controverts narratives of globalization as a unifying force or homogenizing process in which differences are smoothed out to facilitate the flows of goods and capital. In doing so, these contemporary African novels become “global” by turning critical attention to the power dynamics that structure the present.