“(The Knocking) Has Never Stopped”

Andrzej Gąsiorek
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Abstract

Arguing against critics who situate Jean Rhys in either the modernist or postcolonial camps, this chapter suggests that these movements complement and reinforce one another. In “Again the Antilles” (1927), Voyage in the Dark (1934), and Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), Rhys consistently employs ellipsis, narrative fragmentation, and multiple narrators to unmask the ideological underpinnings of plantocratic ideology. Of special interest to Rhys are modernity’s discontinuities, which extend to the rigid binaries of the Caribbean: white and black, master and slave, colonizer and colonized. Unable to fit easily into any of these categories, Rhys’s heroines become “marooned in ruinous subject positions.” Although her work is sometimes read as a form of revisionism that exculpates the colonial class, Rhys not only enables the colonized to speak—most memorably through the character of Christophine in Wide Sargasso Sea—but also exposes the ways in which official discourse ratifies the logic and legacy of colonialism.
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“(敲门声)从未停止过”
本章反驳了那些将Jean Rhys置于现代主义或后殖民阵营的评论家,认为这些运动是相互补充和加强的。在《再次来到安地列斯群岛》(1927年)、《黑暗航行》(1934年)和《马尾藻海》(1966年)中,里斯一贯采用省略、叙事碎片化和多重叙述者的方式来揭示植物统治意识形态的意识形态基础。里斯特别感兴趣的是现代性的不连续性,这种不连续性延伸到加勒比地区的严格二元对立:白人和黑人,主人和奴隶,殖民者和被殖民者。由于无法轻易地归入上述任何一类,里斯笔下的女主人公们“被困在毁灭性的主体位置上”。虽然她的作品有时被解读为一种为殖民阶级开脱的修正主义,但里斯不仅使被殖民者能够说话——最令人难忘的是通过《广阔的马尾藻海》中的克里斯托弗这个角色——而且还揭露了官方话语认可殖民主义逻辑和遗产的方式。
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