Towards Prejudiced Unhomeliness and Corrective Alterity: Ontology, Hermeneutics, and Transgressive Myth in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land

Omar Hansali, Houban Brahim
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Abstract

With the advent of today’s cross-cultural alterities, the percolating notions of ‘home’, ‘self’, and ‘other’, have undergone radical transformations. This alterity, if at all, has bred a world of changing identities under the indefatigable pretext of a global consciousness. In Totality and Infinity, Emmanuel Levinas has made us leery of forging a reality that never existed; a ‘saraband of cultures’ where nomadic figures become rootless subjects. Amid these palpable alterities, the ‘self’ has embraced the transient tropes of a planetary world and a diasporic consciousness. The question remains: how is it possible to think of postcolonial subjectivity amid a world of mobility and displacement? Or, more precisely, how can we conceive of subjectivity and alterity? Overridden by these questions, this article critiques the tacit roots of the poststructuralist subject whose rootless wandering demeans the primacy of historical rootedness. The subject’s errant rootlessness necessitates a thinking that is neither absolute nor homeless. The postmodern nomad forsakes the facticity of home and forges an otherness that is irreducibly errant. In doing so, the nomad grants the ‘other’ its own myths and ideals. Postcolonial subjectivity, as this article underscores, possesses an indispensable rootedness in the facticity of shared existence. This article re-thinks postcolonial subjectivity in accordance with the hermeneutic horizon of ‘factical rootedness’ in a world of impeding prejudices. While the Western hero represents the ‘other’, the postmodern nomad transcends the land. Both models of subjectivity are culturally and politically suspect. Whereas the colonial subject reduces the ‘other’ to an object of experience, the postmodern nomad does not defy the ‘other’s myths and idols. It so happens that instead of forging an alterity that evinces the self/other dichotomy by embracing an absolute otherness, hermeneutic prejudice encourages an alterity that defies the chauvinistic logic of the subject and the ‘other’s’ claim to absolute estrangement. The discussion on hermeneutic subjectivity calls for a radical return to the soil to which only the figure of the prejudiced subject can uphold. In The Waste Land, the Greek seer Tiresias, defied by Eliot’s prejudiced stance, trespasses the threshold of pure subjectivity and forges a transformative subjectivity that illuminates the corrective alterity of prejudice (Vorurteil).
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走向偏见的不孤独与矫正的异性:T. S. 艾略特《荒原》中的本体论、诠释学和超越神话
随着当今跨文化变革的到来,"家园"、"自我 "和 "他者 "的概念发生了翻天覆地的变化。这种改变性(如果有的话)以全球意识为借口,孕育了一个身份不断变化的世界。在《总体与无限》一书中,埃马纽埃尔-列维纳斯(Emmanuel Levinas)让我们警惕伪造一个从未存在过的现实,一个游牧民族成为无根主体的 "文化的萨拉班德"。在这些显而易见的变化中,"自我 "接受了地球世界和散居意识的瞬息变化。问题仍然是:在一个流动和颠沛流离的世界中,如何看待后殖民主体性?或者更确切地说,我们如何看待主体性和改变性?在这些问题的推波助澜下,本文批判了后结构主义主体的默示根性,这种主体的无根游荡贬低了历史根性的首要性。主体的无根游荡需要一种既非绝对也非无家可归的思维。后现代游牧民族放弃了家园的事实性,创造了一种不可复制的错误的他者性。这样,游牧者就赋予了 "他者 "自己的神话和理想。正如本文所强调的,后殖民主体性不可或缺地植根于共同存在的事实性之中。本文根据 "事实扎根性 "的诠释学视角,在一个充满偏见的世界中重新思考后殖民主体性。西方英雄代表着 "他者",而后现代游牧民族则超越了土地。这两种主体性模式在文化和政治上都是可疑的。殖民主体将 "他者 "简化为经验的客体,而后现代游牧民族并不蔑视 "他者 "的神话和偶像。与其说诠释学的偏见通过拥抱绝对的他者来建立一种证明自我/他者二分法的改变性,不如说它鼓励一种改变性,这种改变性蔑视主体的沙文主义逻辑和 "他者 "对绝对疏远的诉求。关于诠释学主体性的讨论呼吁彻底回归土壤,只有偏见主体的形象才能坚持这一点。在《荒原》中,希臘先知提瑞西阿斯(Tiresias)在艾略特的偏見立場的挑戰下,闖入了純粹主體性的門檻,鍛造了一種轉化的主體性,照亮了偏見的矯正性(Vorurteil)。
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