澳大利亚人,流氓和懒汉:西蒙·汉塞尔曼的梅格,莫格和猫头鹰漫画作为当代流氓文学的实例

IF 0.2 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
Ronnie Scott
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文考察了澳大利亚艺术家Simon Hanselmann的Megg、Mogg和Owl故事,他的连载漫画既描绘了一群朋友在内城合租屋犯下的当代无赖行为,又测试了其讲故事惯例的一般局限性,从而成为“无赖文本”的当代实例,一个女巫,莫格,她熟悉的猫头鹰,他们的室友,以及包括布格和狼人琼斯在内的相关人物,他们是澳大利亚垃圾小说流派和流氓文学的广泛国际传统的当代变体。它展示了Megg、Mogg、Owl和他们的朋友如何利用合租屋的结构制定自己的规则,进行非法行为,并回应主流社会的限制,这些限制与法律限制一起包括对性别和行为的规范性限制。它展示了共享屋对其经济、文化和社会条件的回应。然后,这篇论文展示了Megg,尤其是Owl,是如何克服他们“无赖”社会的放纵和明显安全性的限制,并开始从群体中“变得无赖”。同时,文本本身并没有随着时间的推移而前进,而是采用了相同的年表,并从新的角度对其进行了重新描述,变得修正主义和重新创作,也许表现得与情节、小插曲形式的可供性背道而驰,展示人物对社会和一般限制的反应,并通过不安和创新的漫画文本来表达他们。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Aussies, Rogues and Slackers: Simon Hanselmann’s Megg, Mogg and Owl Comics as Contemporary Instances of Rogue Literature
Abstract This paper examines the Megg, Mogg and Owl stories of Simon Hanselmann, an Australian artist whose serialized comics both depict acts of contemporary roguery committed by a group of friends in an inner city sharehouse and test the generic limits of its own storytelling conventions, thereby becoming contemporary instances of “rogue texts.” The paper positions the adventures of Megg, a witch, Mogg, her familiar, Owl, their housemate, and associated characters including Booger and Werewolf Jones as contemporary variations of both the Australian genre of grunge fiction and the broad international tradition of rogue literature. It shows how Megg, Mogg, Owl and their friends use the structure of the sharehouse to make their own rules, undertake illegal behaviour, and respond to the strictures of mainstream society, which alongside legal restrictions include normative restrictions on gender and behaviour. It shows the sharehouse as a response to their economic, as well as cultural and social conditions. The paper then shows how Megg and particularly Owl come up against the limitations of the permissiveness and apparent security of their “rogue” society, and respond by beginning to “go rogue” from the group. Meanwhile, the text itself, rather than advancing through time, goes over the same chronology and reinscribes it from new angles, becoming revisionist and re-creative, perhaps behaving roguishly against the affordances of episodic, vignette form. The paper argues that Simon Hanselmann’s Megg, Mogg and Owl comics can be understood as contemporary rogue texts, showing characters responding to social and generic limits and expressing them through a restless and innovative comics text.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture, based at the University of Łódź, is an international and interdisciplinary journal, which seeks to engage in contemporary debates in the humanities by inviting contributions from literary and cultural studies intersecting with literary theory, gender studies, history, philosophy, and religion. The journal focuses on textual realities, but contributions related to art, music, film and media studies addressing the text are also invited. Submissions in English should relate to the key issues delineated in calls for articles which will be placed on the website in advance. The journal also features reviews of recently published books, and interviews with writers and scholars eminent in the areas addressed in Text Matters. Responses to the articles are more than welcome so as to make the journal a forum of lively academic debate. Though Text Matters derives its identity from a particular region, central Poland in its geographic position between western and eastern Europe, its intercontinental advisory board of associate editors and internationally renowned scholars makes it possible to connect diverse interpretative perspectives stemming from culturally specific locations. Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture is prepared by academics from the Institute of English Studies with considerable assistance from the Institute of Polish Studies and German Philology at the University of Łódź. The journal is printed by Łódź University Press with financial support from the Head of the Institute of English Studies. It is distributed electronically by Sciendo. Its digital version published by Sciendo is the version of record. Contributions to Text Matters are peer reviewed (double-blind review).
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