身份的扩散:西方叙事习俗视角下的三篇当代泰国短篇小说研究

Sean Ford
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摘要

文学作品通过与文化相关的背景、主题和技巧来表达普遍的主题。本文回顾了西方短篇小说的一般惯例,包括观点、主角、冲突、上升情节、高潮、下降情节和结局,以研究不同的模式如何阐明泰国和西方之间的文化差异。凯瑟琳·曼斯菲尔德(Katherine Mansfield)和艾米·谭(Amy Tan)广为人知的故事为传统的西方模式及其多样性提供了例证,并为发现具有众多当代泰国短篇小说特征的其他模式提供了基础。本文通过对S.E.A.写作奖得主Phaitoon Thanya、Anchan和Ussiri Thammachot的故事的分析,通过比较西方传统的视角,揭示了涉及观点和情节的不同叙事技巧如何阐明和证实了关于身份本质的不同表达。这些泰国短篇小说的叙事模式有助于产生身份的扩散,反映出一种集体主义精神,以及对不确定性和无常的接受,而对西方模式的坚持则强化了个人自我随着时间的推移而永恒和持续的核心信念。
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The Diffusion of Identity: A Study of Three Contemporary Thai Short Stories through the Lens of Western Narrative Conventions
Literary works give expression to universal themes through settings, subjects, and techniques that are culturally tied. This article reviews generic conventions involving point of view, protagonist, conflict, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution that typify Western short stories in order to examine how varying patterns can illuminate cultural contrasts between Thailand and the West. Widely known stories by Katherine Mansfield and Amy Tan serve to exemplify the conventional Western pattern and its versatility and to provide a basis for discovering alternative patterns that characterize numerous contemporary Thai short stories. An analysis of stories by S.E.A. Write award winners Phaitoon Thanya, Anchan, and Ussiri Thammachot through the comparative lens of Western conventions reveals how divergent narrative techniques involving point of view and plot elucidate and corroborate divergent expressions regarding the nature of identity. Narrative patterns in these Thai short stories help produce diffusions of identity that reflect a collectivist ethos and an acceptance of uncertainty and impermanence, while adherence to the Western formula reinforces a core belief in the permanence and persistence of the individual ego over time.
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