《使女的解放》:艾尔莎·莫兰特、埃琳娜·费兰特和玛格丽特·阿特伍德的迷魂世界、地下故事、反乌托邦叙事

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, ROMANCE
Tiziana de Rogatis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文将考察三位不同女性作家的三部小说:艾尔莎·莫兰特的《谎言与魔法》(1948);Elena Ferrante的《那不勒斯四重奏》(2011-2014);玛格丽特·阿特伍德(Margaret Atwood)的《使女的故事》(The Handmaid’s Tale)(1985年出版,但由于同名电视剧的出现,该书于2017年在全球范围内复活)。本文的目的是证明这些小说有四个共同的方面:元叙事框架、复调、创伤现实主义和时间的寓言形式。在每一种情况下,写作和历史都是通过识别物理/象征性的地方来定义的,这些地方能够和/或激发三位主人公和叙事声音的抵抗和生存形式。这些空间的物理结构共享另一个不变的元素:它们都是被三个主角的生存实践所解放的颠覆空间。颠覆恰恰在于它们最初被描绘成与世隔绝、痛苦、现实和/或隐喻性的下沉空间。地下现实主义与从下面透视的假设不谋而合。在这种幻觉般的现实主义中,产生了一种特定的时间品质,每一次都以不同的方式表现出来:被《谎言与魔法》迷住;费兰特四部曲中的历史与代际;《使女的故事》中的反乌托邦。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Handmaid’s Liberation: Bewitched Worlds, Underground Stories, Dystopian Narratives in Elsa Morante, Elena Ferrante and Margaret Atwood
ABSTRACT This paper will examine three novels by three different women writers: Lies and Sorcery (1948) by Elsa Morante; the Neapolitan Quartet (2011–2014) by Elena Ferrante; and Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale (published in 1985, but revived on a global scale in 2017 thanks to the homonymous TV series). The aim of this paper is to demonstrate that these novels share four common aspects: the metanarrative frame, the polyphony, the traumatic realism and the allegorical form of time. In each case, writing and history are defined through the identification of physical/symbolic places that enable and/or stimulate forms of resistance and survival in the three protagonists and narrating voices. The physical architecture of these spaces shares another constant element: they are all subverted spaces that have been freed by the practice of survival of the three protagonists. The subversion precisely resides in their being initially featured as cloistered, painful, realistically and/or metaphorically sunken spaces. The underground realism coincides with the assumption of perspective from below. Within this hallucinated realism arises a given temporal quality, each time characterized in a different manner: bewitched in Lies and Sorcery; historical and generational in Ferrante’s quadrilogy; dystopian in The Handmaid’s Tale.
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来源期刊
Romance Studies
Romance Studies LITERATURE, ROMANCE-
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