Take the Elevator to Tomorrow

PRISM Pub Date : 2022-03-01 DOI:10.1215/25783491-9645922
Astrid Møller-Olsen
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Abstract

What if, in the encounter between the subject and the city, it is the buildings, the streets, the rooms that are moving and the human beings who are at a standstill? Inspired by the efforts of literary scholars and human geographers to apply a unified understanding of space and time to the study of the (fictional) city, this article employs an analysis centered on the figure of the elevator to explore how literary narratives can help expand our understanding of space-time as an intuitive and quotidian fact of existence. In a comparative study of Taiwanese author Wu Mingyi's short story “The Ninety-Ninth Floor” and Hong Kong writer Dorothy Tse's “Mute Doors,” this article proposes the term time-space as a suitable concept for dealing with discrete sections of space-time in literature and goes on to explore the elevator as a prime example of such an explicitly temporal, and spatially confined, time-space.
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乘电梯去明天
如果,在主体与城市的相遇中,是建筑、街道、房间在移动,而人是静止的呢?受文学学者和人文地理学家将空间和时间的统一理解应用于(虚构)城市研究的启发,本文以电梯的形象为中心进行分析,探讨文学叙事如何帮助我们扩展对时空作为一种直观的、日常的存在事实的理解。本文通过对台湾作家吴明义的短篇小说《九十九楼》和香港作家谢乐茜的《无声的门》的比较研究,提出了“时空”一词作为文学中处理时空离散部分的合适概念,并进一步探讨了电梯作为这种明确的时间和空间限制的时空的一个主要例子。
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PRISM
PRISM Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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