Modernism and Māoritanga

P. Steer
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In its reading of the bone people, this chapter reexamines Keri Hulme’s controversial borrowings from literary modernism in light of her claims to represent a postcolonial identity derived from Māori cultural traditions. The chapter distinguishes between a “modernist critical realism” deriving from Ernest Hemingway and Sherwood Anderson and a more formally experimental modernism employing myth, fantasy, intertextual borrowings, and Joycean wordplay. This second strain of modernism has raised doubts about the “authenticity” of Hulme’s representation of a New Zealand reborn out of Māori culture. The chapter argues that it was never Hulme’s aim to portray or preserve a pure and “authentic” Māori culture. Hulme’s narrative instead models an understanding of indigeneity as capable of incorporating modernist aesthetics within it. Hulme thus reconfigures “postcolonial hybridity” in the service of a bicultural vision of New Zealand that embraces settler culture within a distinctively Māori framework.
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现代主义和Māoritanga
在阅读骨人的过程中,本章重新审视了Keri Hulme从文学现代主义中有争议的借用,因为她声称自己代表了一种源于Māori文化传统的后殖民身份。这一章区分了来自欧内斯特·海明威和舍伍德·安德森的“现代主义批判现实主义”和采用神话、幻想、互文借用和乔伊斯式文字游戏的更正式的实验现代主义。这第二种现代主义流派引发了人们对休姆在Māori文化中重生的新西兰再现的“真实性”的质疑。这一章认为,赫尔姆的目的从来不是描绘或保存一种纯粹的、“真实的”Māori文化。赫尔姆的叙述反而塑造了一种对土著的理解,能够将现代主义美学融入其中。因此,Hulme重新配置了“后殖民杂糅”,为新西兰的双文化愿景服务,在独特的Māori框架内拥抱定居者文化。
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