{"title":"流行病是伟大的平衡器?美国短篇小说中的阶级、社区与资本","authors":"C. Birkle","doi":"10.1386/fict_00058_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article focuses on literature’s potential for healing – both medical and sociopolitical – in times of severe crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Affect is an important literary tool to make people aware of social inequalities, in particular reading or writing short stories with the experience of a simultaneous real-life pandemic. Reading is an embodied act through which the reader enters into a dialogue with both the author and the text. Emotions emerge that are often more deeply stored in memory than the words as such, and that changes our perception of the world. This effect is also encapsulated in Siri Hustvedt’s analysis of reading practices, Sara Ahmed’s affect theory and Rita Felski’s four ways of engaging with texts. I analyse John O’Hara’s short story ‘The Doctor’s Son’ (1935), situated in rural Pennsylvania at the time of the 1918 Influenza, and Victor LaValle’s ‘Recognition’ (2020), resonating with the COVID-19 pandemic in an isolated apartment building in New York City. Both stories question the concept of pandemics as the great levellers by pointing out social injustice due to class and ethnic hierarchies. Taking Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘The Masque of the Red Death’ (1842) and Poe’s emphasis on the preconceived and single effect of fear and subsequent horror caused by the ‘Red/Black Death’, as a starting point, the article presents O’Hara’s story as a manifestation of the medical, social and ethnic phenomena at work in 1918: social distancing, facial masks, closed public institutions, people’s resistance to these measures and medical treatment along ethnic and class lines. LaValle’s ‘Recognition’ allows readers a glimpse into the relationship between an unnamed African American woman, who is also the narrator, and Pilar, a Colombian American woman, who dies of the virus. As part of a contemporary Decameron project, ‘Recognition’ stresses the human need for community, communication and, thus mutual human recognition, giving the dead – whether rich or poor – a name and demanding to undo systemic social inequalities. In that sense, literature can heal the nation.","PeriodicalId":36146,"journal":{"name":"Short Fiction in Theory and Practice","volume":"16 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Pandemics as the great levellers? Class, community and capital in US-American short stories\",\"authors\":\"C. 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I analyse John O’Hara’s short story ‘The Doctor’s Son’ (1935), situated in rural Pennsylvania at the time of the 1918 Influenza, and Victor LaValle’s ‘Recognition’ (2020), resonating with the COVID-19 pandemic in an isolated apartment building in New York City. Both stories question the concept of pandemics as the great levellers by pointing out social injustice due to class and ethnic hierarchies. Taking Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘The Masque of the Red Death’ (1842) and Poe’s emphasis on the preconceived and single effect of fear and subsequent horror caused by the ‘Red/Black Death’, as a starting point, the article presents O’Hara’s story as a manifestation of the medical, social and ethnic phenomena at work in 1918: social distancing, facial masks, closed public institutions, people’s resistance to these measures and medical treatment along ethnic and class lines. LaValle’s ‘Recognition’ allows readers a glimpse into the relationship between an unnamed African American woman, who is also the narrator, and Pilar, a Colombian American woman, who dies of the virus. As part of a contemporary Decameron project, ‘Recognition’ stresses the human need for community, communication and, thus mutual human recognition, giving the dead – whether rich or poor – a name and demanding to undo systemic social inequalities. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文重点关注文学在医疗和社会政治方面的治愈潜力,尤其是在COVID-19大流行等严重危机时期。情感是一种重要的文学工具,可以使人们意识到社会不平等,特别是在阅读或撰写同时经历现实大流行的短篇小说时。阅读是一种具体化的行为,读者通过这种行为与作者和文本进行对话。情绪的出现往往比语言本身更深刻地储存在记忆中,这改变了我们对世界的看法。这种影响也体现在Siri Hustvedt对阅读实践的分析、Sara Ahmed的情感理论和Rita Felski的四种与文本互动的方式中。我分析了约翰·奥哈拉(John O ' hara)的短篇小说《医生的儿子》(1935年)和维克多·拉瓦勒(Victor LaValle)的《识别》(2020年),故事发生在1918年流感期间的宾夕法尼亚州农村,故事与纽约市一栋孤立的公寓楼里的COVID-19大流行产生了共鸣。这两个故事都通过指出阶级和种族等级造成的社会不公正,质疑流行病是伟大的平等者的概念。以埃德加·爱伦·坡的《红死病的面具》(1842)和坡对“红/黑死病”引起的恐惧和随后的恐怖的先入为主和单一影响的强调为起点,文章将奥哈拉的故事作为1918年工作中的医学,社会和种族现象的表现:社会距离,面具,封闭的公共机构,人们对这些措施的抵制以及沿着种族和阶级路线的医疗。拉瓦勒的《认出》让读者得以一窥一位不知名的非裔美国妇女(也是叙述者)与死于病毒的哥伦比亚裔美国妇女皮拉尔之间的关系。作为当代十日谈项目的一部分,“承认”强调了人类对社区、交流以及相互承认的需求,给死者——无论贫富——一个名字,并要求消除系统性的社会不平等。从这个意义上说,文学可以治愈民族。
Pandemics as the great levellers? Class, community and capital in US-American short stories
This article focuses on literature’s potential for healing – both medical and sociopolitical – in times of severe crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Affect is an important literary tool to make people aware of social inequalities, in particular reading or writing short stories with the experience of a simultaneous real-life pandemic. Reading is an embodied act through which the reader enters into a dialogue with both the author and the text. Emotions emerge that are often more deeply stored in memory than the words as such, and that changes our perception of the world. This effect is also encapsulated in Siri Hustvedt’s analysis of reading practices, Sara Ahmed’s affect theory and Rita Felski’s four ways of engaging with texts. I analyse John O’Hara’s short story ‘The Doctor’s Son’ (1935), situated in rural Pennsylvania at the time of the 1918 Influenza, and Victor LaValle’s ‘Recognition’ (2020), resonating with the COVID-19 pandemic in an isolated apartment building in New York City. Both stories question the concept of pandemics as the great levellers by pointing out social injustice due to class and ethnic hierarchies. Taking Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘The Masque of the Red Death’ (1842) and Poe’s emphasis on the preconceived and single effect of fear and subsequent horror caused by the ‘Red/Black Death’, as a starting point, the article presents O’Hara’s story as a manifestation of the medical, social and ethnic phenomena at work in 1918: social distancing, facial masks, closed public institutions, people’s resistance to these measures and medical treatment along ethnic and class lines. LaValle’s ‘Recognition’ allows readers a glimpse into the relationship between an unnamed African American woman, who is also the narrator, and Pilar, a Colombian American woman, who dies of the virus. As part of a contemporary Decameron project, ‘Recognition’ stresses the human need for community, communication and, thus mutual human recognition, giving the dead – whether rich or poor – a name and demanding to undo systemic social inequalities. In that sense, literature can heal the nation.