[民间的探索:20世纪新斯科舍省的反现代主义与文化选择]

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
I. Mckay, S. Drodge
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Such reflexivity is particularly evident in Ian McKay's The Quest of the Folk and Ronald Rompkey's Labrador Odyssey, both of which offer alternatives to the founding fictions that have worked to efface the cultural histories of at least some Atlantic Canadians. These texts foreground the representation of culture, challenging us to read against historical and folkloric constructions of societies and their identities. They ask that we acknowledge the subject positions of historical narratives and question the processes behind what we are asked to read as culture. It is this reading practice that informs my own comments on the five diverse accounts of maritime histories and cultures offered in The Quest of the Folk, Labrador Odyssey, Home Medicine, Canadians at Last and The Tenant League of Prince Edward Island.McKay's The Quest of the Folk examines the antimodernist impulse at work in the processes of cultural selection and invention in twentieth-century Nova Scotia. Its thesis is interesting and adversarial: \"The Folk,\" as category and construction, reduces \"people once alive to the status of inert essences\" and voids \"the emancipatory potential of historical knowledge\" (xvi). What is perhaps most contentious is not the argument itself, but the representation of \"cultural producers\" such as Helen Creighton as aesthetic colonizers who actively sought and produced the Folk according to their own romantic impulses: This book is about the \"path of destiny\" that led Creighton and countless other cultural figures to develop \"the Folk\" as the key to understanding Nova Scotian culture and history. It is about the ways in which urban cultural producers, pursuing their own interests and expressing their own view of things, constructed the Folk of the countryside as the romantic antithesis to everything they disliked about modern urban and industrial life. (4)Its five chapters contextualize the concept of the Folk, explore Creighton's role in the development of maritime folklore, examine the commodification and discourse of \"Innocence,\" and survey the idea of the Folk under postmodern conditions (30). In its demystification of the interpretative framework and construction of culture and identity, The Quest of the Folk revises twentieth-century Nova Scotian history and calls for a \"questioning of the ways in which a politics of cultural selection has made certain debatable assumptions seem like 'natural' commonsense\" (40).Strategic representation is both a conceptual focus and a rhetorical tactic of The Quest of the Folk, which characterizes Creighton as both a romantic ethnographer and a shrewd businessperson with copyright privileges and movie rights on her mind: \"To preserve the idealized 'culture' of the Folk was necessarily to commodify it. This was the contradictory logic of modernizing antimodernism\" (136). McKay's rhetorical manoeuvring is particularly evident in his many references to \"Helen\" that implicitly work to diminish her authenticity as a professional. In representing the influences that informed Creighton's reading of the Folk and her criteria for canonization, McKay foregrounds her class perspective and split subjectivity, \"caught between the roles of Victorian ladyhood and the twentieth-century professionalism of a 'new woman'\" (61). …","PeriodicalId":45057,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES-REVUE D ETUDES CANADIENNES","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"1999-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.2307/25144053","citationCount":"126","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"[The Quest of the Folk: Antimodernism & Cultural Selection in Twentiety-Century Nova Scotia]\",\"authors\":\"I. Mckay, S. 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引用次数: 126

摘要

民间的探索:二十世纪新斯科舍省的反现代主义与文化选择。伊恩·麦凯。蒙特利尔和金斯顿:麦吉尔-女王大学出版社,1994年。这十年来,国内和国际对加拿大大西洋地区的文化和历史的兴趣日益浓厚。这种关注——最明显地体现在诸如《航运新闻》、玛格丽特博物馆和凯尔特音乐复兴等当代艺术活动的流行上——也许表明了一种对简单生活的浪漫怀旧在大众的想象中挥之不去。在学术界,怀旧正在发生反身性的转变,被认为是文本和事件解释学中的一个因素。这种反思性在伊恩·麦凯的《追寻民间》和罗纳德·罗姆基的《拉布拉多奥德赛》中表现得尤为明显,这两本书都为那些试图抹去至少一些大西洋加拿大人的文化历史的奠基小说提供了另一种选择。这些文本突出了文化的表现,挑战我们对社会及其身份的历史和民俗结构的阅读。他们要求我们承认历史叙事的主体地位,并质疑我们被要求阅读的文化背后的过程。正是这种阅读习惯,让我对《民间的探索》、《拉布拉多的奥德赛》、《家庭医学》、《加拿大人终于来了》和《爱德华王子岛的房客联盟》这五本不同的海洋历史和文化描述有了自己的看法。麦凯的《追求民间》考察了20世纪新斯科舍省文化选择和发明过程中的反现代主义冲动。它的论点是有趣的和对抗性的:“民间”,作为范畴和结构,将“曾经活着的人降低到惰性本质的地位”,并使“历史知识的解放潜力”无效(xvi)。最有争议的可能不是论点本身,而是“文化生产者”的代表,如海伦·克莱顿,作为审美殖民者,他们根据自己的浪漫冲动积极地寻找和生产民间:这本书是关于“命运之路”的,它引导克莱顿和无数其他文化人物将“民俗”作为理解新斯科舍省文化和历史的关键。它是关于城市文化生产者如何追求自己的利益,表达自己对事物的看法,将乡村民间作为他们不喜欢的现代城市和工业生活的浪漫对立面。(4)它的五个章节将民间概念置于语境中,探讨克莱顿在海上民间传说发展中的作用,考察“纯真”的商品化和话语,并调查后现代条件下的民间观念(30)。在其对文化和身份的解释框架和建构的去神秘化中,《民间的探索》修正了20世纪新斯科舍省的历史,并呼吁“质疑文化选择的政治使某些有争议的假设看起来像‘自然’常识的方式”(40)。战略再现既是《追求民间》的概念焦点,也是一种修辞策略,它将克莱顿塑造成一个浪漫的民族志学家,同时也是一个精明的商人,她心中有版权和电影版权:“为了保存理想化的民间‘文化’,就必须将其商品化。这是使反现代主义现代化的矛盾逻辑”(136)。麦凯的修辞手法在他多次提到“海伦”时尤为明显,这暗示着削弱了她作为一名专业人士的真实性。在描述影响克莱顿对《民间》的阅读和她的封圣标准的影响时,麦凯突出了她的阶级视角和分裂的主体性,“夹在维多利亚夫人的角色和20世纪‘新女性’的专业主义之间”(61)。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[The Quest of the Folk: Antimodernism & Cultural Selection in Twentiety-Century Nova Scotia]
The Quest of the Folk: Antimodernism and Cultural Selection in Twentieth-century Nova Scotia. Ian McKay. Montreal and Kingston: McGill- Queen's University Press, 1994.This decade has seen a rising national and international interest in the cultures and histories of Atlantic Canada. This attention - most conspicuously manifest in the popularity of such contemporary artistic events as The Shipping News, Margaret's Museum and the Celtic music revival - perhaps signifies that a certain romantic nostalgia for the simpler life lingers in the popular imagination. In the academic world, nostalgia is taking a reflexive turn, being acknowledged as an element at work in the hermeneutics of texts and events. Such reflexivity is particularly evident in Ian McKay's The Quest of the Folk and Ronald Rompkey's Labrador Odyssey, both of which offer alternatives to the founding fictions that have worked to efface the cultural histories of at least some Atlantic Canadians. These texts foreground the representation of culture, challenging us to read against historical and folkloric constructions of societies and their identities. They ask that we acknowledge the subject positions of historical narratives and question the processes behind what we are asked to read as culture. It is this reading practice that informs my own comments on the five diverse accounts of maritime histories and cultures offered in The Quest of the Folk, Labrador Odyssey, Home Medicine, Canadians at Last and The Tenant League of Prince Edward Island.McKay's The Quest of the Folk examines the antimodernist impulse at work in the processes of cultural selection and invention in twentieth-century Nova Scotia. Its thesis is interesting and adversarial: "The Folk," as category and construction, reduces "people once alive to the status of inert essences" and voids "the emancipatory potential of historical knowledge" (xvi). What is perhaps most contentious is not the argument itself, but the representation of "cultural producers" such as Helen Creighton as aesthetic colonizers who actively sought and produced the Folk according to their own romantic impulses: This book is about the "path of destiny" that led Creighton and countless other cultural figures to develop "the Folk" as the key to understanding Nova Scotian culture and history. It is about the ways in which urban cultural producers, pursuing their own interests and expressing their own view of things, constructed the Folk of the countryside as the romantic antithesis to everything they disliked about modern urban and industrial life. (4)Its five chapters contextualize the concept of the Folk, explore Creighton's role in the development of maritime folklore, examine the commodification and discourse of "Innocence," and survey the idea of the Folk under postmodern conditions (30). In its demystification of the interpretative framework and construction of culture and identity, The Quest of the Folk revises twentieth-century Nova Scotian history and calls for a "questioning of the ways in which a politics of cultural selection has made certain debatable assumptions seem like 'natural' commonsense" (40).Strategic representation is both a conceptual focus and a rhetorical tactic of The Quest of the Folk, which characterizes Creighton as both a romantic ethnographer and a shrewd businessperson with copyright privileges and movie rights on her mind: "To preserve the idealized 'culture' of the Folk was necessarily to commodify it. This was the contradictory logic of modernizing antimodernism" (136). McKay's rhetorical manoeuvring is particularly evident in his many references to "Helen" that implicitly work to diminish her authenticity as a professional. In representing the influences that informed Creighton's reading of the Folk and her criteria for canonization, McKay foregrounds her class perspective and split subjectivity, "caught between the roles of Victorian ladyhood and the twentieth-century professionalism of a 'new woman'" (61). …
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