Novel Worlds

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Journal of Language Literature and Culture Pub Date : 2016-09-01 DOI:10.1080/20512856.2016.1244906
Vanessa Smith
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Abstract

The word ‘world’ recurs ninety-six times in Virginia Woolf’s The Waves, a work more commonly understood as a Modernist experiment with temporality and voice, but which might also be thought of as one of the novel’s most self-reflexive engagements with world-making. The increasingly extended speech acts of six voices are encapsulated within typographically distinct interludes, whose description of the gradual revelation of sky and firmament and the movement of light and water over the course of a single day recalls the foundational world-creation of Genesis. In the effortful process of extracting character, context, narrative time and sequence from the continuous present of the voices’ attributed speech, the reader is invited to confront her co-implication in the taken-for-granted work of constructing novel worlds. Each articulation of ‘world’ contributes to distinguishing each voice as character. ‘The light falls upon real objects now. Here are knives and forks. The world is displayed, and we too, so that we can talk’, says Neville. ‘I require the concrete in everything. It is so only that I lay hands upon the world’, says Bernard (Woolf, The Waves 58).
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小说的世界
“世界”这个词在弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫的《海浪》中出现了96次,这部作品通常被理解为现代主义对时间性和声音的实验,但它也可能被认为是小说中对世界创造最自我反思的作品之一。六个声音的不断扩展的言语行为被封装在排版不同的插曲中,这些插曲描述了一天中天空和苍穹的逐渐显现以及光和水的运动,这让人想起了《创世纪》中基本的世界创造。在费力地从声音的归属话语中提取人物、语境、叙事时间和顺序的过程中,读者被邀请面对她在构建小说世界的理所当然的工作中的共同含义。“世界”的每个发音都有助于区分每个声音的特征。“现在光线照在真实的物体上了。这些是刀叉。世界被展示出来了,我们也一样,这样我们就可以交谈了,”内维尔说。“我要求所有东西都是混凝土的。只有这样,我才会把手放在世界上”,伯纳德说(伍尔夫,《海浪》58)。
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CiteScore
0.30
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2
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