《关于故事的故事:幻想与神话再造

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B. Robertson
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Attebery calls for and models an approach focused on the particular interactions of various mythic traditions in fantasy texts, that is, the ways in which fantasy texts tell stories about stories by reframing traditional (often oral) narratives in contemporary contexts with surprising results. His method remains problematic, however.Prior to Stories about Stories, Attebery's lasting contribution to fantasy criticism and scholarship, aside from the fact that he is one of the main reasons there is such a field at all in its present form, had been his conceptualization of the \"fuzzy set\" as a means to understand genre. As described in Strategies of Fantasy, the fuzzy set (in the context of fantasy or sf or some other genre) is defined by, first, a center composed of a few texts which inarguably belong to the set (e.g., Tolkien, Lewis, and Le Guin), and second, by texts that enjoy greater or lesser degrees of \"family resemblance\" with those central ones. This concept allows critics to be less concerned with developing and maintaining firm borders between fantasy and related genres (especially, at the time, sf). Two recent studies of fantasy, Farah Mendlesohn's Rhetorics of Fantasy (2008) and Stefan Ekman's Here Be Dragons: Exploring Fantasy Maps and Settings (2013), take the fuzzy set as a starting point even as they add to or modify the concept.In Stories about Stories, Attebery underscores the logic of the fuzzy set while acknowledging its limitations: \"I still like this way of cutting through the Gordion knot of genre classification, but it does not account for all the historical and social dimensions of genre\" (33). With regard to fantasy, fuzzy sets do not account for the manner in which fantasy texts and authors draw upon and recontextualize myth. Attebery writes: \"I do not want to merely claim that one can find myth in fantasy, though that is certainly the case. Rather, I am looking at the way writers use fantasy to reframe myth: to construct new ways of looking at traditional stories and beliefs\" (2-3). He continues by arguing that \"instead of spending so much time simply identifying a particular Celtic myth in a work of modern fantasy,\" critics and scholars \"should look at how the fantasist appropriates from, engages with, travesties, and reconstitutes the myth. The modern reuse will never be the same as the original performance\" (3). In short, Stories about Stories concerns itself with not only the various traditions upon which fantasy draws, but also the nature of this drawing upon. As worthy a goal as the first task remains, the latter is far more important. Attebery makes this point clear in later chapters.The book's early chapters focus on proto- and early fantasists such as Hope Mirrlees, Charles Williams, George MacDonald, and C. S. Lewis. Attebery calls attention to interesting relationships between fantasy and high modernism as well as the manner in which fantasy adopted and reframed Christian mythology for a secular world. His argument hinges on a discussion of colonial fantasy in Chapter 5. Critics, he contends, should not take the remaking of myth as a neutral act; any scholarship that would content itself with merely pointing out that text A draws upon myth B runs the risk of assuming such neutrality. …","PeriodicalId":42992,"journal":{"name":"EXTRAPOLATION","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2016-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"15","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Stories about Stories: Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth\",\"authors\":\"B. Robertson\",\"doi\":\"10.5860/choice.51-6004\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The Future of Fantasy Criticism. Brian Attebery. 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Attebery calls for and models an approach focused on the particular interactions of various mythic traditions in fantasy texts, that is, the ways in which fantasy texts tell stories about stories by reframing traditional (often oral) narratives in contemporary contexts with surprising results. His method remains problematic, however.Prior to Stories about Stories, Attebery's lasting contribution to fantasy criticism and scholarship, aside from the fact that he is one of the main reasons there is such a field at all in its present form, had been his conceptualization of the \\\"fuzzy set\\\" as a means to understand genre. As described in Strategies of Fantasy, the fuzzy set (in the context of fantasy or sf or some other genre) is defined by, first, a center composed of a few texts which inarguably belong to the set (e.g., Tolkien, Lewis, and Le Guin), and second, by texts that enjoy greater or lesser degrees of \\\"family resemblance\\\" with those central ones. This concept allows critics to be less concerned with developing and maintaining firm borders between fantasy and related genres (especially, at the time, sf). Two recent studies of fantasy, Farah Mendlesohn's Rhetorics of Fantasy (2008) and Stefan Ekman's Here Be Dragons: Exploring Fantasy Maps and Settings (2013), take the fuzzy set as a starting point even as they add to or modify the concept.In Stories about Stories, Attebery underscores the logic of the fuzzy set while acknowledging its limitations: \\\"I still like this way of cutting through the Gordion knot of genre classification, but it does not account for all the historical and social dimensions of genre\\\" (33). With regard to fantasy, fuzzy sets do not account for the manner in which fantasy texts and authors draw upon and recontextualize myth. Attebery writes: \\\"I do not want to merely claim that one can find myth in fantasy, though that is certainly the case. 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Attebery calls attention to interesting relationships between fantasy and high modernism as well as the manner in which fantasy adopted and reframed Christian mythology for a secular world. His argument hinges on a discussion of colonial fantasy in Chapter 5. 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引用次数: 15

摘要

幻想批评的未来。布莱恩Attebery。《关于故事的故事:幻想与神话再造》牛津:牛津大学出版社,2014。240页,ISBN 978-0-19-931607-6。pbk 29.95美元。布赖恩·阿特伯里的《关于故事的故事:幻想与神话的再造》是一部关于幻想的重要著作。尽管如此,我希望它不会定义一个幻想批评的程序,从而损害其他方法和关注。可以肯定的是,阿特伯里巩固了他作为幻想文学最重要的学者之一的地位,这一地位是他通过他的前两本书获得的,《美国文学中的幻想传统:从欧文到勒奎恩》(1980)和《幻想策略》(1992)。《关于故事的故事》比前两本书视野更开阔,更强调其重要性。阿特伯里呼吁并建立了一种方法,专注于幻想文本中各种神话传统的特殊互动,也就是说,幻想文本通过在当代语境中重构传统(通常是口头)叙事来讲述故事的方式,并产生了令人惊讶的结果。然而,他的方法仍然存在问题。在《关于故事的故事》之前,阿特伯里对奇幻文学批评和学术的持久贡献,除了他是这个领域以现在的形式存在的主要原因之一之外,还在于他将“模糊集”概念化,作为理解流派的一种手段。正如《幻想策略》(Strategies of Fantasy)所描述的那样,模糊集(在奇幻、科幻或其他类型的背景下)的定义是:首先,由几个无可争议地属于该集的文本组成的中心(例如托尔金、刘易斯和勒奎恩);其次,与这些中心文本或多或少具有“家族相似性”的文本。这一概念使得评论家们不太关心幻想和相关类型(特别是在当时的科幻小说)之间的界限。Farah Mendlesohn的《幻想修辞学》(2008)和Stefan Ekman的《Here Be Dragons: Exploring fantasy Maps and Settings》(2013)这两项关于幻想的最新研究都将模糊集作为起点,尽管它们对概念进行了添加或修改。在《关于故事的故事》中,阿特贝利强调了模糊集的逻辑,同时也承认了它的局限性:“我仍然喜欢这种打破类型分类难题的方式,但它并不能解释类型的所有历史和社会维度”(33)。关于幻想,模糊集不能解释幻想文本和作者对神话的借鉴和重新语境化的方式。阿特伯里写道:“我不想仅仅声称人们可以在幻想中找到神话,尽管事实确实如此。更确切地说,我关注的是作家如何用幻想来重新定义神话:构建看待传统故事和信仰的新方式。”他接着说,“与其花那么多时间在现代幻想作品中简单地识别一个特定的凯尔特神话,”评论家和学者们“应该看看幻想家是如何从神话中挪用、参与、歪曲和重建神话的。”(3)简而言之,《关于故事的故事》不仅关注幻想所借鉴的各种传统,还关注这种借鉴的本质。虽然第一项任务仍然是一个值得追求的目标,但后者要重要得多。阿特贝利在后面的章节中阐明了这一点。这本书的前几章聚焦于原型和早期幻想家,如霍普·莫里斯、查尔斯·威廉姆斯、乔治·麦克唐纳和c·s·刘易斯。阿特伯里呼吁人们关注幻想与高度现代主义之间的有趣关系,以及幻想在世俗世界中采用和重构基督教神话的方式。他的论点取决于第五章对殖民幻想的讨论。他认为,批评家不应该把神话的重制当作一种中立的行为;任何仅仅满足于指出文本A借鉴了神话B的学术研究都冒着假设这种中立的风险。...
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Stories about Stories: Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth
The Future of Fantasy Criticism. Brian Attebery. Stories about Stories: Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. 240 pp. ISBN 978-0-19-931607-6. $29.95 pbk.Reviewed by Benjamin J. RobertsonBrian Attebery's Stories about Stories: Fantasy and the Remaking of Myth is an important book about fantasy. Nonetheless, I hope that it does not define a program for fantasy criticism going forward to the detriment of other approaches and concerns. To be sure, Attebery solidifies his position as one the most important scholars of fantasy literature, a position he earned with his first two books, The Fantasy Tradition in American Literature: From Irving to Le Guin (1980) and especially Strategies of Fantasy (1992). Stories about Stories takes a broader view and makes a stronger claim for its significance than either of the previous books. Attebery calls for and models an approach focused on the particular interactions of various mythic traditions in fantasy texts, that is, the ways in which fantasy texts tell stories about stories by reframing traditional (often oral) narratives in contemporary contexts with surprising results. His method remains problematic, however.Prior to Stories about Stories, Attebery's lasting contribution to fantasy criticism and scholarship, aside from the fact that he is one of the main reasons there is such a field at all in its present form, had been his conceptualization of the "fuzzy set" as a means to understand genre. As described in Strategies of Fantasy, the fuzzy set (in the context of fantasy or sf or some other genre) is defined by, first, a center composed of a few texts which inarguably belong to the set (e.g., Tolkien, Lewis, and Le Guin), and second, by texts that enjoy greater or lesser degrees of "family resemblance" with those central ones. This concept allows critics to be less concerned with developing and maintaining firm borders between fantasy and related genres (especially, at the time, sf). Two recent studies of fantasy, Farah Mendlesohn's Rhetorics of Fantasy (2008) and Stefan Ekman's Here Be Dragons: Exploring Fantasy Maps and Settings (2013), take the fuzzy set as a starting point even as they add to or modify the concept.In Stories about Stories, Attebery underscores the logic of the fuzzy set while acknowledging its limitations: "I still like this way of cutting through the Gordion knot of genre classification, but it does not account for all the historical and social dimensions of genre" (33). With regard to fantasy, fuzzy sets do not account for the manner in which fantasy texts and authors draw upon and recontextualize myth. Attebery writes: "I do not want to merely claim that one can find myth in fantasy, though that is certainly the case. Rather, I am looking at the way writers use fantasy to reframe myth: to construct new ways of looking at traditional stories and beliefs" (2-3). He continues by arguing that "instead of spending so much time simply identifying a particular Celtic myth in a work of modern fantasy," critics and scholars "should look at how the fantasist appropriates from, engages with, travesties, and reconstitutes the myth. The modern reuse will never be the same as the original performance" (3). In short, Stories about Stories concerns itself with not only the various traditions upon which fantasy draws, but also the nature of this drawing upon. As worthy a goal as the first task remains, the latter is far more important. Attebery makes this point clear in later chapters.The book's early chapters focus on proto- and early fantasists such as Hope Mirrlees, Charles Williams, George MacDonald, and C. S. Lewis. Attebery calls attention to interesting relationships between fantasy and high modernism as well as the manner in which fantasy adopted and reframed Christian mythology for a secular world. His argument hinges on a discussion of colonial fantasy in Chapter 5. Critics, he contends, should not take the remaking of myth as a neutral act; any scholarship that would content itself with merely pointing out that text A draws upon myth B runs the risk of assuming such neutrality. …
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EXTRAPOLATION
EXTRAPOLATION LITERATURE-
CiteScore
0.60
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33.30%
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