“剑、绳、毒、火”:斯宾塞对绝望辅助自杀的客观化的黑暗材料,以及斯克尔顿和莎士比亚的笔记

IF 0.1 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES
James Nohrnberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在Spenser的《精灵Queene I.ix》中的《绝望》一集中,自我屠杀的挑衅性物质手段象征性地与心理诱因加倍,特别是在Skelton的《Magnyfycence》中的前作文本和《治安法官的Mirrour》中的Cordela故事的模型上。手段和原因的配对是传统的一部分。基督教信徒面对上帝的律法,对自己的罪恶感到绝望,正如阴谋论的邪恶良心所表达的那样,这也导致了有罪的“对上帝的不信任和绝望”(路德),同样也导致了对救赎的不信任——以及不可征服的自我指责,使罪人与折磨者或恶魔般的控诉者加倍,并引诱他或她减少损失,减轻他/她的痛苦、悲伤和厌世,并夺走他/她的生命。《精灵奎恩》和其他作品中的其他自杀类型,如Phedon或Malbecco,在神学上没有得到他们的希望的证实,也没有得到它的帮助,但他们仍然可以阐明基督徒绝望者的投射、诱惑、恶魔和动作,以及他或她的逆境、抑郁、痛苦、不耐烦、愤怒、厌世、忧郁症和冲动。正如克尔凯郭尔的《病入膏肓》中所发现的那样,绝望者的状况可以通过各种早期现代和中世纪的道德说教和说教文本得到进一步的说明、诊断和帮助。虽然莎士比亚笔下的科迪莉娅被绞死符合斯宾塞的描述(FQII.x.32),但她自杀的绝望只是埃德蒙这个角色的诽谤。更确切地说,是她未来的救助者李尔王描绘了痛苦和绝望的画面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Swords, ropes, poison, fire”: The Dark Materials of Spenser’s Objectification of Despair-Assisted Suicide, with Notes on Skelton and Shakespeare
In the Despair episode in Spenser’s Faerie Queene I .ix, the provocative material means for self-slaughter are emblematically doubled with the psychological inducements, particularly on the models of predecessor texts in Skelton’s Magnyfycence and the Cordela story in The Mirrour for Magistrates . The pairing of means and causes is part of a tradition. So also is the despair of a Christian believer over his own sinfulness, in the face of God’s law, as voiced by a conspiratorial evil conscience, leading to a sinful “unbelief and despair of God” (Luther) and likewise unbelief in salvation—and to an unconquerable self-accusation, which doubles the sinner with tormentors, or a diabolic Accuser, and tempts him or her to cut his/her losses, relieve his/her pain, sorrows, and world-weariness, and take his/her life. Other suicidal types in The Faerie Queene and elsewhere, who are not theologically confirmed in their wanhope or assisted by it to their end, such as Phedon or Malbecco, can nonetheless illuminate the projections, temptations, demons, and motions of the Christian despair-er, and his or her adversity, depression, distress, impatience, furor, world-weariness, melancholia, and driven-ness. The despair-er’s condition, as found in Kierkegaard’s Sickness unto Death , can be further illustrated, diagnosed, and ministered to, by means of a variety of early modern and medieval moralizing and homiletic texts. And while the death of Shakespeare’s Cordelia by hanging conforms to Spenser’s account ( FQ II .x.32), her suicidal despair is only a slander bruited by the character Edmund. Rather, it is her would-be rescuer Lear who is the picture of misery and despair.
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Explorations in Renaissance Culture
Explorations in Renaissance Culture MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES-
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