Beyond postcolonial Gothic in African literature

Chukwunonso Ezeiyoke
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract The dominant way that Gothic is currently conceptualized in African literature is through postcolonial theory, examining repressed colonial history and horror. While there is nothing wrong with this framework, what this dominant approach does is flatten out and elide other complex ways of reading through what these texts have constructed as fearful and monstrous. This essay relies on the framework of Rebecca Duncan, who suggests a way of conceptualizing Afro-gothic that does not rely on the postcolonial theory paradigm. Following Abiola Irele, Duncan proposes Afro-gothic to be dependent on the influence of African orality where the “supernatural figures associated with particular cosmologies or mythologies … are presented in gothic terms” in the literary texts (Duncan 158). Using two canonical texts and a recent text based on Yoruba and Igbo oralities, the supernatural substrate, ogbanje/abiku from Igbo/Yoruba cosmologies within these texts will be excavated to reveal the Gothic dimensions that have previously been overlooked. I will engage in this analysis by closely reading Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, the poem “Abiku” by JP Clark, and Freshwater by Akwaeke Emezi.
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超越后殖民时期的非洲哥特式文学
非洲文学目前对哥特的概念化主要是通过后殖民理论,考察被压抑的殖民历史和恐怖。虽然这个框架没有什么错,但这种主导方法所做的是,将其他复杂的阅读方式扁平化,并忽略了这些文本所构建的可怕和可怕的东西。本文以丽贝卡·邓肯为框架,提出了一种不依赖于后殖民理论范式的非哥特式概念化方式。继Abiola irelle之后,Duncan提出非哥特式依赖于非洲口头语言的影响,在文学文本中,“与特定宇宙论或神话有关的超自然人物……以哥特式的方式呈现”(Duncan 158)。使用两个权威文本和最近基于约鲁巴和伊博口头的文本,这些文本中的超自然基础,来自伊博/约鲁巴宇宙学的ogbanje/abiku将被挖掘出来,以揭示以前被忽视的哥特维度。我将通过仔细阅读奇努阿·阿契贝的《分崩离析》、JP克拉克的《阿比库》和阿克瓦克·埃梅齐的《淡水》来进行分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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