(再)在丹尼斯·斯科特的《骨头里的回声》中通过复活死者来回忆受创伤的他者

IF 0.1 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Leqa’a Salam Abu-Mahfouz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文考察了丹尼斯·斯科特的《骨中的回声》(1974)中创伤的存在及其影响。它讨论了奴隶制和殖民化对牙买加和加勒比地区个人和社会的创伤性影响。该剧的故事发生在牙买加,那里的人们反抗欧洲奴隶制和英国殖民制度的压迫。斯科特找回了奴隶制的痛苦记忆,“骨中的回声”指的是种族压迫和剥削的记忆。斯科特的创造力体现在回忆电影的闪回中,这些闪回有着共同的概念,描绘了奴隶和殖民政策的痛苦经历。回顾创伤的持续影响,当代牙买加人一直遇到从奴隶制的历史,直到后殖民时代,探讨。戏剧的行动框架是由死者的九夜仪式提供的,这一传统超越了葬礼传统的哀悼表现,以荣耀和解放死者的精神。为此,研究人员认为,通过牙买加的传统回忆创伤是一种断言创伤是代代相传的遗产的手段。研究人员得出结论,该剧复活了奴隶制和殖民主义制度下压迫和剥削的所有创伤经历,以解决当代牙买加后独立社会所遇到的创伤状况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
(Re) membering the Traumatized Other through Resurrecting the Dead in Dennis Scott’s An Echo in the Bone
This paper examines the presence and impact of trauma in Dennis Scott’s An Echo in the Bone (1974). It discusses the traumatic effects of slavery and colonization on the individual and the society in Jamaica and the Caribbean. The action of the play takes place in Jamaica where people struggle against the oppression of European system of slavery and British colonial system. Scott retrieves the grievous memories of slavery, where the phrase ‘echo in the bone’ refers to racial memories of oppression and exploitation. Scott’s creativity appears through recalling cinematic flashbacks with concentric notions that depict the painful experiences of slaves and colonial policies. Recalling the continuous effects of trauma, which contemporary Jamaicans had been encountering since the history of slavery until the postcolonial era, are explored. The framework of the play’s action is provided by the Nine Night ceremony of the dead – a tradition that transcends the mourning manifestation of funeral traditions to glorify and liberate the dead person’s spirit. To this end, the researchers argue that recalling trauma through Jamaican tradition is a means of asserting that trauma is a heritage that was passed down through several generations. The researchers conclude that the play resurrects all the traumatic experiences of oppression and exploitation under the systems of slavery and colonialism to address the traumatic conditions encountered by the contemporary post-independence society in Jamaica.
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