象征死亡与重生为女性:日本平安时代与中世纪继女叙事分析

Sachi Schmidt-Hori
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文通过对几个前现代日本故事的比较阅读,以《大久保物语》(约10世纪)和《八和》(约15世纪)为重点,试图从一个新的角度来解读“继母虐待继女”这一常见的文学修辞。在已有的学术研究中,关于马mako ijime的虚构描述似乎最多被视为准普遍、不证自明的现象的反映。因此,很少有人对文学文本中这种特殊形式的女性对女性暴力的普遍存在或功能进行调查。反过来,本研究将对mamako ijime的盲目接受归因于对中年妇女的负面刻板印象,这是过去和现在的读者所共有的,并提供了一个更批判性的解释。基于前现代日本故事中反复出现的模式,mamako ijime可以被解读为死去的生母对女儿的“严厉的爱”。通过忍受继母(或已故母亲的邪恶代理人)的虐待(尽管不是致命的)行为,女主人公成长为有韧性、有爱心、聪明的女人,最终获得了牢固的婚姻、财富和声望,所有这些都是生母希望她们的女儿得到的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Symbolic Death and Rebirth into Womanhood: An Analysis of Stepdaughter Narratives from Heian and Medieval Japan
Through a comparative reading of several premodern Japanese tales with a focus on Ochikubo monogatari (ca. tenth century) and Hachi-kazuki (ca. fifteenth century), this essay attempts to interpret the common literary trope of mamako ijime —stepmothers’ mistreatment of their stepdaughters—in a new light. Within the pre-existing scholarship, the fictional accounts of mamako ijime seem to have been viewed as a reflection of quasi-universal, self-evident phenomena at best. Consequently, little inquiry has been made regarding the ubiquity or functions of this particular form of female-on-female violence in literary texts. The present study, in turn, attributes the blind acceptance of the universality of mamako ijime to negative stereotypes against middle-aged women, shared by the readers of the past and present, and offers a more critical interpretation thereof. Based on the recurrent patterns found in premodern Japanese tales, mamako ijime can be read as the dead birthmothers’ “tough love” for their daughters. By enduring the abusive (albeit not deadly) deeds of the stepmothers—or the evil surrogates of the late mothers—the heroines mature into resilient, caring, and wise women and ultimately achieve strong marriage, wealth, and prestige, all of which would have been what the birthmothers wished upon their daughters.
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