解构Ramón Esono ebal的《奥比pesadilla de Obi》中的独裁者形象

J. Boampong
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摘要

赤道几内亚自1968年脱离西班牙独立以来,只经历过两个独裁政权,目前由非洲在位时间最长的独裁者领导,自由问题在赤道几内亚文学中占据着重要地位。尽管在非洲文学批评中,西班牙语传统很少被探索,来自赤道几内亚西班牙语文学传统的作家,就像他们的英语和法语同行一样,以不同的方式解决了独裁统治的问题及其影响。Joaquim Mbomio Bacheng将西班牙语文学描述为“一首永恒追求新世界的自由之歌”,这很好地说明了赤道几内亚作家对独裁统治对国家的束缚的反应。当代西班牙语作家Ramón Esono ebal以其激进主义和引人注目的文本而闻名,他的生活和作品体现了巴成的观察,可以说是最有力地面对独裁的主题。本文仔细阅读了ebale的图画小说《欧比的噩梦》(La pesadilla de Obi),书中运用视觉和文字的力量,塑造了从独裁者转变为普通公民的主人公欧比的新地位。我认为,对独裁者形象的解构是一个坚实的基础,可以迫使其目标受众制定一种反话语,以动摇对奥巴马的既定观念。
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Deconstructing the figure of the dictator in Ramón Esono Ebalé’s La pesadilla de Obi
Abstract As a country which, since gaining independence from Spain in 1968, has only known two autocratic regimes and is currently headed by Africa’s longest-serving dictator, the question of freedom weighs heavily on the literature of Equatorial Guinea. Although the Hispanophone tradition is little explored within African literary criticism, writers from the Hispanophone literary tradition of Equatorial Guinea, much like their Anglophone and Francophone counterparts, address the question of dictatorship and its repercussions in varied ways. Joaquim Mbomio Bacheng’s description of Hispanophone literature as “a song of freedom in its eternal quest for a new world” is very telling of Equatoguinean writers’ response to the stranglehold that dictatorship has over the country. One contemporary Hispanophone author whose life and works exemplify Bacheng’s observation, and arguably confront the subject of dictatorship most forcefully, is Ramón Esono Ebalé, renowned for his activism and visually arresting texts. This paper undertakes a close reading of Ebalé’s graphic novel La pesadilla de Obi [Obi’s nightmare], which employs the power of both visual and written texts to fashion a new status for Obi, its dictator-turned-ordinary-citizen protagonist. I argue that the deconstruction of the image of the dictator serves as a solid basis for compelling its target audience to formulate a counter-discourse to destabilize established notions about Obiang.
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