食物和其他献给读者的东西:叙事小说中的性别政治和食物

Onoriu Colăcel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

玛格丽特·阿特伍德的小说《可食用的女人》(1969)和吉莉安·梅多夫的小说《饥饿点》(2002)从一个明显缺席的作者的角度,提到了关于女性和营养的常用修辞。虽然传统上被认为是情境化的手段,但为了达到戏剧性的效果,事件的展开使烹饪和饮食成为一个谜。对家务琐事的报道指出了食物摄入的话题性,以及饮食失调所带来的所有戏剧性。在事件的背景下,“侦探小说”和“厨房水槽戏剧”结合在一起,形成了一个不太可能的故事。事后看来,我们有可能认为,上个世纪著名的女权主义小说(如《可食用的女人》)为21世纪后期的小说(如《饥饿点》)提供了比叙事强调二元性别关系更多的东西。我发现,正如阿特伍德作品中所记录的那样,性别角色辩论获得了足够的文化动力,足以证明在整个20世纪及以后,女性养育的形象是现成的。就女权主义小说而言,如果不是推动情节发展的因素,那么过量/不足总是在背景中的某个地方。通常,小说人物(主要是女性)的苦恼都与体重和节食联系在一起,这可能会让女性和食物的概念永远沦为情节剧,就像《饥饿点》一样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Edibles and Other Offerings to Readers: The Politics of Gender and Food in Narrative Fiction
Abstract From the perspective of an apparently absent author, the rhetorical commonplaces of womanhood and nourishment are mentioned in the novels of Margaret Atwood, The Edible Woman (1969), and of Jillian Medoff, Hunger Point (2002). Although traditionally relegated to contextualizing devices, the unfolding of events makes a riddle out of cooking and eating for the purpose of dramatic effect. Reporting on what might come across as domestic chores points to the topicality of food intake as well as to all the drama eating disorders entail. In the background of events, the ‘whodunit’ and the ‘kitchen sink drama’ come together into one unlikely story. The benefits of hindsight make it possible to argue that celebrated feminist novels of the past century, i.e. The Edible Woman, provided later 21st century fiction, i.e. Hunger Point, with something more than narrative emphasis on binary gender relations. I find that the gender-roles debate, as recorded in Atwood’s work, gained enough cultural momentum to prove the ready availability of the image of the nurturing female throughout the 20th century and beyond. As far as feminist fictions are concerned, over/under-feeding is always somewhere in the background, if not what drives the plot forward. Commonly, distress among fictional characters, mostly women, is linked to body weight and dieting in ways that threaten to relegate, possibly once and for good, the notions of women and food to the realm of melodrama, as it is the case with Hunger point.
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