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摘要

“浪漫”这个词被广泛应用于长篇韵文叙事、情节散文叙事、戏剧、古希腊晚期的故事,以及当代大众市场小说的一个流行亚类型。在18世纪和19世纪,它与“novel”(小说)竞争,成为该类型小说的标准术语(后来后者胜出,成为我们常用词汇的一部分)。浪漫也成为莎士比亚作品的一个标准分支,这是一种戏剧类型,从19世纪开始,与喜剧、悲剧和历史并列,成为经典的基石之一。事实上,读者和学者们对“浪漫”一词的使用如此混杂,以至于暗示几乎不可能用任何清晰或有意义的定义来定义它。这个词仅仅是一个不连贯概念的空能指吗?一个在最无益的意义上是“通用”的模糊标签?也许恰恰相反,“浪漫”作为一个标签之所以有力量,是因为它的可变性和范围。在实践层面上,理解读者、出版商和作家使用这个术语的灵活方式,可以让我们深入了解最丰富(也可能是最古老)的讲故事方式之一。浪漫也让我们看到,同样的传统最终是如何从更古老、更深奥的形式中衍生出来的。因为它也涉及到一种类型理论,浪漫一直是不可或缺的。诺斯罗普·弗莱(Northrop Frye)和弗雷德里克·詹姆逊(Fredric Jameson)对类型理论的两个最重要的研究,都把浪漫作为一种文学和历史实践。因此,研究浪漫就是研究这一类型本身的形式和传统;将浪漫故事理论化,就是提供一个历史和概念框架,说明各种类型是如何在讲故事的实践中发挥作用的。
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Romance
“Romance” is a term that has been variously applied to long-form verse narratives, episodic prose narratives, drama, stories from late Greek antiquity, and a popular subgenre of contemporary mass market fiction. In the 18th and 19th centuries it vied with “novel” as the standard term for the genre (before the latter won out to become part of our common vocabulary). Romance has also become a standard division of Shakespeare’s works, a dramatic genre that, beginning in the 19th century, stood alongside comedy, tragedy, and history as one of the cornerstones of the canon. Indeed, readers and scholars use “romance” so promiscuously as to suggest the near impossibility of drawing its definition with any clarity or meaning. Is the word merely an empty signifier for an incoherent concept? A vague label that is “generic” in the most unhelpful sense? Perhaps, contrarily, “romance” has power as a label because of its variability and range. On a practical level, understanding the pliant ways that readers, publishers, and writers have used this term provides insight to one of the richest (and perhaps oldest) veins of storytelling. Romance also gives us a view of how those same traditions ultimately derive from more ancient and esoteric forms. As it relates to a theory of genre, too, romance has been indispensable. Two of the most important treatments of genre theory, by Northrop Frye and Fredric Jameson, center on romance as a literary and historical practice. To study romance is therefore to study the shapes and traditions of genre itself; to theorize romance is to provide a history and conceptual framework for how genres have worked and continue to work within storytelling practices.
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