穆丽尔·斯帕克的《驾驶座》中的元虚构宿命论

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Carlos Villar Flor, Ana Isabel Altemir Giral
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引用次数: 0

摘要

穆里尔·斯帕克(Muriel Spark)的《驾驶座》(The Driver's Seat)是一个激进的元虚构实验,暗示了偶然性和预先确定的情节之间的必然联系,这在许多斯帕克小说中都很常见。玛丽娜·麦凯(Marina MacKay)认为,斯帕克的实验叙事“在罗马天主教神学更抽象的关注与后现代主义的元虚构和寓言主义关注重叠的概念空间中”运作(2008:506),本文将讨论命运的概念如何在《驾驶座》中产生反响,这不仅是斯帕克长老会教育的残余,也是对元小说中古典悲剧的后现代再现。斯帕克对预先确定的情节的偏好可能呼应了长达几个世纪的关于自由意志和命运的漫长哲学和神学讨论,在新教改革时期尤为激烈,但它也反映了命运感是古典悲剧的必要组成部分。在《驾驶座》中,斯帕克故意突出亚里士多德悲剧的一些惯例,尽管她通过一种实验性的颠覆来接近这些惯例,最终诉诸于喜剧和嘲笑,但斯帕克自己承认,她是唯一可能的艺术形式的武器。我们的论点是,《驾驶座》中的虚构情节破坏了加尔文主义者关于注定的救赎或诅咒的确定性。通过使用一个只能产生有限叙述的部分叙述者,Spark可能在发挥一种实验性的、本质上是后现代的解释开放性,这与天主教思想中普遍接受的关于每个人永恒救赎的最终不确定性相一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Metafictional Predestination in Muriel Spark's The Driver's Seat
Muriel Spark’s The Driver’s Seat is a radical metafictional experiment, suggesting the inexorable connections between contingency and a predetermined plot which are so common to many Sparkian novels. Following Marina MacKay’s perception that Spark’s experimental narrative operates “in the conceptual space where the more abstract preoccupations of Roman Catholic theology overlap with the metafictional and fabulist concerns of postmodernism” (2008: 506), this essay will discuss how the notion of predestination reverberates in The Driver’s Seat, not only as a remnant of Spark’s Presbyterian education but also as a postmodern re-visitation of classical tragedy in a metafictional key. Spark’s preference for predetermined plots may echo a long philosophical and theological discussion spanning many centuries about free will and predestination, particularly intense in the times of the Protestant Reformation, but it also reflects the sense of predestination as a necessary ingredient of classical tragedy. In The Driver’s Seat Spark deliberately brought to the fore some conventions of Aristotelian tragedy, although she approached them through an experimental subversion ultimately resorting to comedy and ridicule, on Spark’s own admission her weapons for the only possible art form. Our contention is that the metafictional implications of The Driver’s Seat’s prolepses undermine a Calvinist-like certainty concerning predestined salvation or damnation. By using a partial narrator only capable of producing limited accounts, Spark may be playing with an experimental and essentially postmodern interpretive openness which is in tune with the ultimate uncertainty about each individual’s eternal salvation that is commonly accepted in Catholic thought.
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来源期刊
Miscelanea
Miscelanea Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
32 weeks
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