Fairy Tales and Colonial Trauma in Jennifer Kent’s The Nightingale

4区 文学 Q2 Arts and Humanities Marvels & Tales-Journal of Fairy-Tale Studies Pub Date : 2023-03-06 DOI:10.1353/mat.2022.0030
Victoria Tedeschi
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Abstract

Abstract:This article foregrounds connections between Jennifer Kent’s The Nightingale (2018) and the Grimms’ “The Juniper Tree” to suggest that it can be read as part of an Australian fairy-tale film corpus. It argues that figurations of the fairy-tale genre—namely, motifs, character types, and settings—become a means for the protagonist to work through physical and psychological trauma. In the space of the Australian bush, the protagonist Clare Carroll reflects on her sexual assault and the murder of her family. Both the “The Juniper Tree” and Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Nightingale” use bird songs to heal, rewrite wrongs, and restore social order. The Nightingale taps into the liberating and transformative potential of the fairy-tale genre to communicate traumatic experience, adopting the textual resonances of the songbird figure as a means for Clare to exert justice and overcome the lingering effects of trauma related to Australia’s violent colonial history.
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詹妮弗·肯特的《夜莺》中的童话和殖民创伤
摘要:本文将詹妮弗·肯特的《夜莺》(2018)与格林的《杜松树》(The Juniper Tree)联系起来,认为它可以作为澳大利亚童话电影语库的一部分来阅读。它认为,童话类型的形象——即主题、人物类型和背景——成为主人公克服身心创伤的一种手段。在澳大利亚丛林的空间里,主人公克莱尔·卡罗尔反思了她的性侵犯和她的家人被谋杀。《杜松树》和安徒生的《夜莺》都用鸟的歌声来治愈、改写错误、恢复社会秩序。《夜莺》挖掘了童话类型的解放和变革潜力,传达了创伤经历,采用了鸣禽形象的文本共鸣,作为克莱尔伸张正义和克服与澳大利亚暴力殖民历史有关的创伤的挥之不去的影响的手段。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
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期刊介绍: Marvels & Tales (ISSN: 1521-4281) was founded in 1987 by Jacques Barchilon at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Originally known as Merveilles & contes, the journal expressed its role as an international forum for folktale and fairy-tale scholarship through its various aliases: Wunder & Märchen, Maravillas & Cuentos, Meraviglie & Racconti, and Marvels & Tales. In 1997, the journal moved to Wayne State University Press and took the definitive title Marvels & Tales: Journal of Fairy-Tale Studies. From the start, Marvels & Tales has served as a central forum for the multidisciplinary study of fairy tales. In its pages, contributors from around the globe have published studies, texts, and translations of fairy-tales from Europe, North America, Asia, and Africa. The Editorial Policy of Marvels & Tales encourages scholarship that introduces new areas of fairy-tale scholarship, as well as research that considers the traditional fairy-tale canon from new perspectives. The journal''s special issues have been particularly popular and have focused on topics such as "Beauty and the Beast," "The Romantic Tale," "Charles Perrault," "Marriage Tests and Marriage Quest in African Oral Literature," "The Italian Tale," and "Angela Carter and the Literary Märchen." Marvels & Tales is published every April and October by Wayne State University Press.
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