“不是一声巨响,而是一声呜咽”:揭示弗兰·奥布莱恩后期作品中的流行病菌株

IF 0.3 2区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Irish studies review Pub Date : 2023-10-02 DOI:10.1080/09670882.2023.2261390
Maebh Long
{"title":"“不是一声巨响,而是一声呜咽”:揭示弗兰·奥布莱恩后期作品中的流行病菌株","authors":"Maebh Long","doi":"10.1080/09670882.2023.2261390","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTDuring the 1950s and 1960s influenza was a recurring theme in the Cruiskeen Lawn, a satirical column by Myles na Copaleen (Flann O’Brien) in The Irish Times. The columns’ engagement arose from Ireland’s experience of brutal influenza seasons and, in particular, the 1957–58 pandemic, known at the time as the Asian Flu. The pandemic’s virus killed approximately over a million people worldwide, but until our recent, COVID-inspired interest in historical outbreaks, has received very limited critical engagement. In this article I take Flann O’Brien’s The Dalkey Archive as a case study through which to explore literary studies’ amnesia regarding medical history, specifically the 1957–58 pandemic, subsequent influenza outbreaks, and associated bacterial complications. Weaving together O’Brien’s correspondence, journalism and final completed novel, I propose a new way of understanding The Dalkey Archive, one that deprioritises its connections to politics and presents it instead as a response to the symptoms and strains of pandemics and outbreaks.KEYWORDS: Flann O’BrienMyles na gCopaleen1957–58 pandemicinfluenzabreathmedical history Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. “No Asian ‘Flu Before 1967,” Irish Press, 10 December, 1963, 7. Total deaths in Ireland from the influenza epidemic in 1951 were 2,399, which at the time was the highest recorded figure since 1937 (An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil an Árd-Chláraitheora 1951, 7).2. Myles na gCopaleen is the name under which Brian O’Nolan, sometimes better known as Flann O’Brien, wrote the Cruiskeen Lawn columns. O’Nolan’s various pseudonyms complicate citational practices, but accepted best practice by the Flann O’Brien Society is to refer to the author’s life and general writings under his real name, while using his pseudonyms to refer to his various publications. Thus, O’Nolan worked for the Civil Service, O’Brien wrote At Swim-Two-Birds and Myles (the first name is preferred) wrote Cruiskeen Lawn.3. na gCopaleen, Cruiskeen Lawn, 22 January, 1951, 4.4. Ibid.5. Ibid.6. na gCopaleen, “In Flew Enza – III,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 23 December, 1955, 6.7. Ibid. Myles repeats this in “Hard Words – II,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 10 March, 1956.8. Viboud et al., “Global Mortality Impact,” 738. A World Health Organisation page made the broader claim of between 1 and 4 million deaths (World Health Organization: Regional Office for Europe. “Past pandemics.” Accessed 21 October, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220105214754/https://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/communicable-diseases/influenza/pandemic-influenza/past-pandemics).9. Outka, Viral Modernism, 1–31.10. Ahearn, “‘Where you bin, bud?,’” 97–115; Schiff, “‘The Situation had become Deplorably Fluid,’” 116–130; Gillespie, “The Soft Misogyny of Good Intentions,” 77–94; Houston, “‘Veni, V.D., Vici,’” 146–162; and Long, “Abject Bodies,” 163–177.11. Ebury, “Physical Comedy and the Comedy of Physics,” 87–104; Fennell, “Irelands Enough and Time,” 33–45; Hopper, Flann O’Brien; and Nolan, “Flann, Fantasy, and Science Fiction,” 178–190.12. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 325; and Brian O’Nolan to Mark Hamilton, Collected Letters, 344.13. Brian O’Nolan to Mark Hamilton, Collected Letters, 364; Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 325; and Brian O’Nolan to Hester Green, Collected Letters, 336.14. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 343.15. “Hong Kong Battling Influenza Epidemic,” New York Times, 17 April, 1957, 3.16. Pennington, “A Slippery Disease,” 789–790.17. See too: “Influenza Epidemic Spreads in Asia,” The Irish Times, 10 June, 1957, 9.18. Edmundson and Hodgkin, “No Sign of More Influenza,” 112–113.19. “Future of Asian Influenza,” 732.20. “Asian ‘Flu Confirmed in Dublin,” The Irish Times, 1 October, 1957, 7.21. na gCoplaeen, “The Scourge,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 24 August, 1957, 8.22. “Dozen Asian ‘Flu Cases Confirmed in the Republic,” The Irish Times, 9 October, 1957, 7.23. Quidnunc, “An Irishman’s Diary,” The Irish Times, 9 October, 1957, 6. This exchange ends with a dubious aside that I will interpret as an attempt to critique, rather than support, the segregation occurring in Arkansas, US: “Look, even in Little Rock you can still ride in a bus if you have the sniffles.”24. See, for example: “Dublin’s Two Cases of Asian “Flu,” 1; “‘Flu Closes Sligo Schools,” 1; “More ‘Flu But Mild,” 1; “‘Flu closes 17 schools in Dublin,” 1; “‘Flu Epidemic Spreading,” 1; “News from the County,” 11; “‘Flu Still Spreading,” 13; and “Items of Interest,” 2.25. “Asian influenza on Wane,” 9.26. An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1957; An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1958. Deaths from pneumonia were higher – just over 2000 for 1957–1958.27. Jackson, “History Lessons,” 622; Bud, “Germ Warfare,” 30; “10,000,000 caught Asian ‘Flu in Britain,” 4; and “Asian ‘Flu Brought Record Sickness Claims in Britain,” 2.28. “Asian ‘Flu Brought Record Sickness Claims in Britain,” 2; and Jackson, “History lessons,” 622.29. na gCoplaeen, “The Scourge,” 8. In this article Myles refers to Asian ‘flu as “swine fever” and a week later announces his prescience, saying that “Asian Influenza is the same virus as causes swine fever. […] Any pathologist who needs a locum should get in touch with me at Santry Great Place” (na gCoplaeen, “Omnium Gatherum,” 6). Myles was incorrect, however, as H2N2 was an avian flu.30. na gCopaleen, “Limophilia,” 6.31. na gCopaleen, “Youth in Asia,” 8.32. Honigsbaum, “Revisiting the 1957 and 1968,” 1825.33. This position, responsive to contemporary politics as it is, is also in line with Myles’s claims of anti-Asian racism among western powers, particularly following the end of the Second World War. In CL, 20 August, 1945, 3, for example, he makes pointed remarks about the American use of the atomic bomb in Japan. I am grateful to the reviewer for this point.34. na gCopaleen, “Asian Blood,” 8.35. See, for example: Barras and Greub, “History of Biological Warfare,” 497–502.36. Medical Correspondent, “Asian ‘Flu is not dangerous,” 6.37. na gCopaleen, “Return of the Native,” 6.38. Ibid.39. Rosenberg, “What Is an Epidemic? AIDS in Historical Perspective,” 2.40. Oswald, Shooter and Curwen, “Pneumonia Complicating Asian Influenza,” 1307–1308.41. Medical Correspondent, “Bacteria have Set up a Resistance Movement,” 6.42. Oswald, Shooter and Curwen, “Pneumonia Complicating Asian Influenza,” 1306.43. Bud, “Germ Warfare,” 31.44. Bud, Penicillin: Triumph and Tragedy, 120. Following the discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming in 1928, and the work of Ernst Chain and Howard Florey in the early 1940s in rendering penicillin available for mass production, the antibiotic became widely available in 1945, marking the start of the antibiotic era. See, for example: Aminov, “A Brief History of the Antibiotic Era.”45. Nemo Crabbe, one of The Dalkey Archive’s medical students, complains that studying medicine is an exercise in futility, as “Revolutionary advances in diagnosis, treatment and pharmacology take place every few months nowadays. A new wonder-drug makes dozens of familiar medicaments obsolete overnight. Look at penicillin and the antibiotics generally” (O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 695). The conversation turns to the fact that Fleming didn’t discover anything new, as “the intrinsic secret of penicillin was known to folk medicine” (O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 696). Yet there it stops, which furthers the novel’s anachronisms: why would a medical student complaining of changes in the medical scene mention the wonders of penicillin, but not new strains of penicillin-resistant bacteria? An article on the dangers of antibiotic-resistant bacteria was placed above the Cruiskeen Lawn column of 4 February, 1956, and it is extremely unlikely that a man of O’Nolan’s poor health would have been unaware of the cracks in the antibiotic age (Medical Correspondent, “The Doctors Think Again,” The Irish Times, 4 February, 1956, 8). Is the novel set, then, in a reassuring time when antibiotics remained an untroubled cure? Or in raising penicillin at all does O’Nolan presume that antibiotic resistance goes without saying, which thereby reminds readers of the absence of perfect weapons of destruction or cure, be they De Selby’s D.M.P. or antibiotics?46. na gCopaleen, “In Flew Ensa,” 8.47. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 252.48. Brian O’Nolan to Leslie Daiken, Collected Letters, 260.49. An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1961. On 8 February the Irish Times reported that “During the last three weeks, 68 people died in Dublin as a direct result of the influenza epidemic. Of this number, 43 died from influenza pneumonia” (“‘Flu Caused 68 Deaths,” The Irish Times, 8 February, 1961, 1).50. Brian O’Nolan to Leslie Daiken, Collected Letters, 266.51. O’Brien, The Dalkey Archive, 707.52. O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 668.53. Ibid. 613.54. Ibid., 687.55. Ibid.56. Ibid.57. Ibid. 621, (italics mine).58. Ibid. 635.59. Ibid. 766.60. Ibid. 768.61. Niall Montgomery to John Lincoln “Jack” Sweeney, Collected Letters, xv.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Marsden Fund of the Royal Society of New Zealand","PeriodicalId":88531,"journal":{"name":"Irish studies review","volume":"142 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"“Not with a bang but a whimper”: uncovering pandemic strains in Flann O’Brien’s later works\",\"authors\":\"Maebh Long\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/09670882.2023.2261390\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTDuring the 1950s and 1960s influenza was a recurring theme in the Cruiskeen Lawn, a satirical column by Myles na Copaleen (Flann O’Brien) in The Irish Times. The columns’ engagement arose from Ireland’s experience of brutal influenza seasons and, in particular, the 1957–58 pandemic, known at the time as the Asian Flu. The pandemic’s virus killed approximately over a million people worldwide, but until our recent, COVID-inspired interest in historical outbreaks, has received very limited critical engagement. In this article I take Flann O’Brien’s The Dalkey Archive as a case study through which to explore literary studies’ amnesia regarding medical history, specifically the 1957–58 pandemic, subsequent influenza outbreaks, and associated bacterial complications. Weaving together O’Brien’s correspondence, journalism and final completed novel, I propose a new way of understanding The Dalkey Archive, one that deprioritises its connections to politics and presents it instead as a response to the symptoms and strains of pandemics and outbreaks.KEYWORDS: Flann O’BrienMyles na gCopaleen1957–58 pandemicinfluenzabreathmedical history Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. “No Asian ‘Flu Before 1967,” Irish Press, 10 December, 1963, 7. Total deaths in Ireland from the influenza epidemic in 1951 were 2,399, which at the time was the highest recorded figure since 1937 (An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil an Árd-Chláraitheora 1951, 7).2. Myles na gCopaleen is the name under which Brian O’Nolan, sometimes better known as Flann O’Brien, wrote the Cruiskeen Lawn columns. O’Nolan’s various pseudonyms complicate citational practices, but accepted best practice by the Flann O’Brien Society is to refer to the author’s life and general writings under his real name, while using his pseudonyms to refer to his various publications. Thus, O’Nolan worked for the Civil Service, O’Brien wrote At Swim-Two-Birds and Myles (the first name is preferred) wrote Cruiskeen Lawn.3. na gCopaleen, Cruiskeen Lawn, 22 January, 1951, 4.4. Ibid.5. Ibid.6. na gCopaleen, “In Flew Enza – III,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 23 December, 1955, 6.7. Ibid. Myles repeats this in “Hard Words – II,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 10 March, 1956.8. Viboud et al., “Global Mortality Impact,” 738. A World Health Organisation page made the broader claim of between 1 and 4 million deaths (World Health Organization: Regional Office for Europe. “Past pandemics.” Accessed 21 October, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220105214754/https://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/communicable-diseases/influenza/pandemic-influenza/past-pandemics).9. Outka, Viral Modernism, 1–31.10. Ahearn, “‘Where you bin, bud?,’” 97–115; Schiff, “‘The Situation had become Deplorably Fluid,’” 116–130; Gillespie, “The Soft Misogyny of Good Intentions,” 77–94; Houston, “‘Veni, V.D., Vici,’” 146–162; and Long, “Abject Bodies,” 163–177.11. Ebury, “Physical Comedy and the Comedy of Physics,” 87–104; Fennell, “Irelands Enough and Time,” 33–45; Hopper, Flann O’Brien; and Nolan, “Flann, Fantasy, and Science Fiction,” 178–190.12. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 325; and Brian O’Nolan to Mark Hamilton, Collected Letters, 344.13. Brian O’Nolan to Mark Hamilton, Collected Letters, 364; Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 325; and Brian O’Nolan to Hester Green, Collected Letters, 336.14. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 343.15. “Hong Kong Battling Influenza Epidemic,” New York Times, 17 April, 1957, 3.16. Pennington, “A Slippery Disease,” 789–790.17. See too: “Influenza Epidemic Spreads in Asia,” The Irish Times, 10 June, 1957, 9.18. Edmundson and Hodgkin, “No Sign of More Influenza,” 112–113.19. “Future of Asian Influenza,” 732.20. “Asian ‘Flu Confirmed in Dublin,” The Irish Times, 1 October, 1957, 7.21. na gCoplaeen, “The Scourge,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 24 August, 1957, 8.22. “Dozen Asian ‘Flu Cases Confirmed in the Republic,” The Irish Times, 9 October, 1957, 7.23. Quidnunc, “An Irishman’s Diary,” The Irish Times, 9 October, 1957, 6. This exchange ends with a dubious aside that I will interpret as an attempt to critique, rather than support, the segregation occurring in Arkansas, US: “Look, even in Little Rock you can still ride in a bus if you have the sniffles.”24. See, for example: “Dublin’s Two Cases of Asian “Flu,” 1; “‘Flu Closes Sligo Schools,” 1; “More ‘Flu But Mild,” 1; “‘Flu closes 17 schools in Dublin,” 1; “‘Flu Epidemic Spreading,” 1; “News from the County,” 11; “‘Flu Still Spreading,” 13; and “Items of Interest,” 2.25. “Asian influenza on Wane,” 9.26. An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1957; An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1958. Deaths from pneumonia were higher – just over 2000 for 1957–1958.27. Jackson, “History Lessons,” 622; Bud, “Germ Warfare,” 30; “10,000,000 caught Asian ‘Flu in Britain,” 4; and “Asian ‘Flu Brought Record Sickness Claims in Britain,” 2.28. “Asian ‘Flu Brought Record Sickness Claims in Britain,” 2; and Jackson, “History lessons,” 622.29. na gCoplaeen, “The Scourge,” 8. In this article Myles refers to Asian ‘flu as “swine fever” and a week later announces his prescience, saying that “Asian Influenza is the same virus as causes swine fever. […] Any pathologist who needs a locum should get in touch with me at Santry Great Place” (na gCoplaeen, “Omnium Gatherum,” 6). Myles was incorrect, however, as H2N2 was an avian flu.30. na gCopaleen, “Limophilia,” 6.31. na gCopaleen, “Youth in Asia,” 8.32. Honigsbaum, “Revisiting the 1957 and 1968,” 1825.33. This position, responsive to contemporary politics as it is, is also in line with Myles’s claims of anti-Asian racism among western powers, particularly following the end of the Second World War. In CL, 20 August, 1945, 3, for example, he makes pointed remarks about the American use of the atomic bomb in Japan. I am grateful to the reviewer for this point.34. na gCopaleen, “Asian Blood,” 8.35. See, for example: Barras and Greub, “History of Biological Warfare,” 497–502.36. Medical Correspondent, “Asian ‘Flu is not dangerous,” 6.37. na gCopaleen, “Return of the Native,” 6.38. Ibid.39. Rosenberg, “What Is an Epidemic? AIDS in Historical Perspective,” 2.40. Oswald, Shooter and Curwen, “Pneumonia Complicating Asian Influenza,” 1307–1308.41. Medical Correspondent, “Bacteria have Set up a Resistance Movement,” 6.42. Oswald, Shooter and Curwen, “Pneumonia Complicating Asian Influenza,” 1306.43. Bud, “Germ Warfare,” 31.44. Bud, Penicillin: Triumph and Tragedy, 120. Following the discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming in 1928, and the work of Ernst Chain and Howard Florey in the early 1940s in rendering penicillin available for mass production, the antibiotic became widely available in 1945, marking the start of the antibiotic era. See, for example: Aminov, “A Brief History of the Antibiotic Era.”45. Nemo Crabbe, one of The Dalkey Archive’s medical students, complains that studying medicine is an exercise in futility, as “Revolutionary advances in diagnosis, treatment and pharmacology take place every few months nowadays. A new wonder-drug makes dozens of familiar medicaments obsolete overnight. Look at penicillin and the antibiotics generally” (O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 695). The conversation turns to the fact that Fleming didn’t discover anything new, as “the intrinsic secret of penicillin was known to folk medicine” (O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 696). Yet there it stops, which furthers the novel’s anachronisms: why would a medical student complaining of changes in the medical scene mention the wonders of penicillin, but not new strains of penicillin-resistant bacteria? An article on the dangers of antibiotic-resistant bacteria was placed above the Cruiskeen Lawn column of 4 February, 1956, and it is extremely unlikely that a man of O’Nolan’s poor health would have been unaware of the cracks in the antibiotic age (Medical Correspondent, “The Doctors Think Again,” The Irish Times, 4 February, 1956, 8). Is the novel set, then, in a reassuring time when antibiotics remained an untroubled cure? Or in raising penicillin at all does O’Nolan presume that antibiotic resistance goes without saying, which thereby reminds readers of the absence of perfect weapons of destruction or cure, be they De Selby’s D.M.P. or antibiotics?46. na gCopaleen, “In Flew Ensa,” 8.47. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 252.48. Brian O’Nolan to Leslie Daiken, Collected Letters, 260.49. An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1961. On 8 February the Irish Times reported that “During the last three weeks, 68 people died in Dublin as a direct result of the influenza epidemic. Of this number, 43 died from influenza pneumonia” (“‘Flu Caused 68 Deaths,” The Irish Times, 8 February, 1961, 1).50. Brian O’Nolan to Leslie Daiken, Collected Letters, 266.51. O’Brien, The Dalkey Archive, 707.52. O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 668.53. Ibid. 613.54. Ibid., 687.55. Ibid.56. Ibid.57. Ibid. 621, (italics mine).58. Ibid. 635.59. Ibid. 766.60. Ibid. 768.61. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

“亚洲流感在英国带来了创纪录的疾病索赔,”2;杰克逊,《历史课》,622.29分。8.《天灾》(The Scourge)在这篇文章中,迈尔斯将亚洲流感称为“猪瘟”,并在一周后宣布了他的先见之明,说“亚洲流感与引起猪瘟的病毒是同一种病毒。”[…]任何需要医生的病理学家都可以和我在Santry Great Place联系”(na gCoplaeen,“Omnium Gatherum,”6)。然而,迈尔斯错了,因为H2N2是一种禽流感。纳格·科帕林,《恋物癖》,6.31。纳戈帕林,《亚洲青年》,8.32。霍尼斯鲍姆,“回顾1957年和1968年”,1825.33。这一立场是对当代政治的回应,也符合迈尔斯关于西方列强(尤其是二战结束后)存在反亚洲种族主义的说法。例如,在1945年8月20日的《CL》杂志上,他对美国在日本使用原子弹作了尖锐的评论。我很感谢审稿人的这一点。《亚洲血统》(Asian Blood), 8.35分。例如:Barras和Greub,“生物战的历史”,497-502.36。医学记者,“亚洲流感并不危险”,6.37。《还乡》,6.38。Ibid.39。什么是流行病?《历史视角下的艾滋病》,第2.40页。Oswald, Shooter和Curwen,“肺炎并发亚洲流感”,1307-1308.41。医学通讯员,“细菌已经建立了一个抵抗运动”,6.42。Oswald, Shooter和Curwen,“肺炎合并亚洲流感”,第1306.43页。巴德,《细菌战》,31.44分。巴德,《青霉素:胜利与悲剧》,第120页。1928年亚历山大·弗莱明(Alexander Fleming)发现青霉素,20世纪40年代初恩斯特·钱恩(Ernst Chain)和霍华德·弗洛里(Howard Florey)的工作使青霉素可以大规模生产,1945年这种抗生素得到广泛使用,标志着抗生素时代的开始。例如:Aminov,《抗生素时代简史》。尼莫·克拉布(Nemo Crabbe)是达尔基档案馆的一名医科学生,他抱怨说,学习医学是徒劳无益的,因为“如今,诊断、治疗和药理学每隔几个月就会有革命性的进步。”一种新的神奇药物使几十种熟悉的药物在一夜之间被淘汰。看看盘尼西林和抗生素”(奥布莱恩,《小说全集》,695)。谈话转向弗莱明没有发现任何新东西的事实,因为“民间医学已经知道了青霉素的内在秘密”(奥布莱恩,《小说全集》,696)。然而,小说就此打住了,这进一步加深了小说的时代错误:为什么一个医科学生抱怨医疗环境的变化会提到青霉素的奇迹,却不提青霉素耐药细菌的新菌株?1956年2月4日,Cruiskeen Lawn的专栏上刊登了一篇关于耐抗生素细菌危险的文章,奥诺兰健康状况不太可能不知道抗生素时代的裂缝(医学通讯员,“医生重新思考”,《爱尔兰时报》,1956年2月4日,第8期)。那么,小说的背景是在一个令人放心的时代,抗生素仍然是一种无忧无虑的治疗方法吗?还是说,在提高青霉素产量的过程中,奥诺兰认为抗生素耐药性是不言而喻的,从而提醒读者,无论是德·塞尔比(De Selby)的D.M.P.还是抗生素,都不存在完美的毁灭或治愈武器?纳格·科帕林,《飞翔的恩萨》,8.47。布莱恩·欧诺兰致蒂莫西·欧基夫,《书信集》,252.48页。布莱恩·欧诺兰写给莱斯利·戴肯,《书信集》,260.49页。An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil, arstaidreamh Beatha 1961。2月8日,《爱尔兰时报》报道说:“在过去三周内,都柏林有68人直接死于流感。其中43人死于流行性肺炎”(《流感导致68人死亡》,《爱尔兰时报》1961年2月8日第1期)。布莱恩·欧诺兰致莱斯利·戴肯,《信件集》,266.51页。奥布莱恩,达尔基档案馆,707.52。奥布莱恩,《小说全集》,668.53。613.54出处同上。如上,687.55。Ibid.56。Ibid.57。同上,621,(斜体)。635.59出处同上。766.60出处同上。768.61出处同上。尼尔·蒙哥马利致约翰·林肯“杰克”·斯威尼,《书信选集》,15年。本研究得到了新西兰皇家学会马斯登基金的支持
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“Not with a bang but a whimper”: uncovering pandemic strains in Flann O’Brien’s later works
ABSTRACTDuring the 1950s and 1960s influenza was a recurring theme in the Cruiskeen Lawn, a satirical column by Myles na Copaleen (Flann O’Brien) in The Irish Times. The columns’ engagement arose from Ireland’s experience of brutal influenza seasons and, in particular, the 1957–58 pandemic, known at the time as the Asian Flu. The pandemic’s virus killed approximately over a million people worldwide, but until our recent, COVID-inspired interest in historical outbreaks, has received very limited critical engagement. In this article I take Flann O’Brien’s The Dalkey Archive as a case study through which to explore literary studies’ amnesia regarding medical history, specifically the 1957–58 pandemic, subsequent influenza outbreaks, and associated bacterial complications. Weaving together O’Brien’s correspondence, journalism and final completed novel, I propose a new way of understanding The Dalkey Archive, one that deprioritises its connections to politics and presents it instead as a response to the symptoms and strains of pandemics and outbreaks.KEYWORDS: Flann O’BrienMyles na gCopaleen1957–58 pandemicinfluenzabreathmedical history Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. “No Asian ‘Flu Before 1967,” Irish Press, 10 December, 1963, 7. Total deaths in Ireland from the influenza epidemic in 1951 were 2,399, which at the time was the highest recorded figure since 1937 (An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil an Árd-Chláraitheora 1951, 7).2. Myles na gCopaleen is the name under which Brian O’Nolan, sometimes better known as Flann O’Brien, wrote the Cruiskeen Lawn columns. O’Nolan’s various pseudonyms complicate citational practices, but accepted best practice by the Flann O’Brien Society is to refer to the author’s life and general writings under his real name, while using his pseudonyms to refer to his various publications. Thus, O’Nolan worked for the Civil Service, O’Brien wrote At Swim-Two-Birds and Myles (the first name is preferred) wrote Cruiskeen Lawn.3. na gCopaleen, Cruiskeen Lawn, 22 January, 1951, 4.4. Ibid.5. Ibid.6. na gCopaleen, “In Flew Enza – III,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 23 December, 1955, 6.7. Ibid. Myles repeats this in “Hard Words – II,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 10 March, 1956.8. Viboud et al., “Global Mortality Impact,” 738. A World Health Organisation page made the broader claim of between 1 and 4 million deaths (World Health Organization: Regional Office for Europe. “Past pandemics.” Accessed 21 October, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220105214754/https://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/communicable-diseases/influenza/pandemic-influenza/past-pandemics).9. Outka, Viral Modernism, 1–31.10. Ahearn, “‘Where you bin, bud?,’” 97–115; Schiff, “‘The Situation had become Deplorably Fluid,’” 116–130; Gillespie, “The Soft Misogyny of Good Intentions,” 77–94; Houston, “‘Veni, V.D., Vici,’” 146–162; and Long, “Abject Bodies,” 163–177.11. Ebury, “Physical Comedy and the Comedy of Physics,” 87–104; Fennell, “Irelands Enough and Time,” 33–45; Hopper, Flann O’Brien; and Nolan, “Flann, Fantasy, and Science Fiction,” 178–190.12. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 325; and Brian O’Nolan to Mark Hamilton, Collected Letters, 344.13. Brian O’Nolan to Mark Hamilton, Collected Letters, 364; Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 325; and Brian O’Nolan to Hester Green, Collected Letters, 336.14. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 343.15. “Hong Kong Battling Influenza Epidemic,” New York Times, 17 April, 1957, 3.16. Pennington, “A Slippery Disease,” 789–790.17. See too: “Influenza Epidemic Spreads in Asia,” The Irish Times, 10 June, 1957, 9.18. Edmundson and Hodgkin, “No Sign of More Influenza,” 112–113.19. “Future of Asian Influenza,” 732.20. “Asian ‘Flu Confirmed in Dublin,” The Irish Times, 1 October, 1957, 7.21. na gCoplaeen, “The Scourge,” Cruiskeen Lawn, 24 August, 1957, 8.22. “Dozen Asian ‘Flu Cases Confirmed in the Republic,” The Irish Times, 9 October, 1957, 7.23. Quidnunc, “An Irishman’s Diary,” The Irish Times, 9 October, 1957, 6. This exchange ends with a dubious aside that I will interpret as an attempt to critique, rather than support, the segregation occurring in Arkansas, US: “Look, even in Little Rock you can still ride in a bus if you have the sniffles.”24. See, for example: “Dublin’s Two Cases of Asian “Flu,” 1; “‘Flu Closes Sligo Schools,” 1; “More ‘Flu But Mild,” 1; “‘Flu closes 17 schools in Dublin,” 1; “‘Flu Epidemic Spreading,” 1; “News from the County,” 11; “‘Flu Still Spreading,” 13; and “Items of Interest,” 2.25. “Asian influenza on Wane,” 9.26. An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1957; An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1958. Deaths from pneumonia were higher – just over 2000 for 1957–1958.27. Jackson, “History Lessons,” 622; Bud, “Germ Warfare,” 30; “10,000,000 caught Asian ‘Flu in Britain,” 4; and “Asian ‘Flu Brought Record Sickness Claims in Britain,” 2.28. “Asian ‘Flu Brought Record Sickness Claims in Britain,” 2; and Jackson, “History lessons,” 622.29. na gCoplaeen, “The Scourge,” 8. In this article Myles refers to Asian ‘flu as “swine fever” and a week later announces his prescience, saying that “Asian Influenza is the same virus as causes swine fever. […] Any pathologist who needs a locum should get in touch with me at Santry Great Place” (na gCoplaeen, “Omnium Gatherum,” 6). Myles was incorrect, however, as H2N2 was an avian flu.30. na gCopaleen, “Limophilia,” 6.31. na gCopaleen, “Youth in Asia,” 8.32. Honigsbaum, “Revisiting the 1957 and 1968,” 1825.33. This position, responsive to contemporary politics as it is, is also in line with Myles’s claims of anti-Asian racism among western powers, particularly following the end of the Second World War. In CL, 20 August, 1945, 3, for example, he makes pointed remarks about the American use of the atomic bomb in Japan. I am grateful to the reviewer for this point.34. na gCopaleen, “Asian Blood,” 8.35. See, for example: Barras and Greub, “History of Biological Warfare,” 497–502.36. Medical Correspondent, “Asian ‘Flu is not dangerous,” 6.37. na gCopaleen, “Return of the Native,” 6.38. Ibid.39. Rosenberg, “What Is an Epidemic? AIDS in Historical Perspective,” 2.40. Oswald, Shooter and Curwen, “Pneumonia Complicating Asian Influenza,” 1307–1308.41. Medical Correspondent, “Bacteria have Set up a Resistance Movement,” 6.42. Oswald, Shooter and Curwen, “Pneumonia Complicating Asian Influenza,” 1306.43. Bud, “Germ Warfare,” 31.44. Bud, Penicillin: Triumph and Tragedy, 120. Following the discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming in 1928, and the work of Ernst Chain and Howard Florey in the early 1940s in rendering penicillin available for mass production, the antibiotic became widely available in 1945, marking the start of the antibiotic era. See, for example: Aminov, “A Brief History of the Antibiotic Era.”45. Nemo Crabbe, one of The Dalkey Archive’s medical students, complains that studying medicine is an exercise in futility, as “Revolutionary advances in diagnosis, treatment and pharmacology take place every few months nowadays. A new wonder-drug makes dozens of familiar medicaments obsolete overnight. Look at penicillin and the antibiotics generally” (O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 695). The conversation turns to the fact that Fleming didn’t discover anything new, as “the intrinsic secret of penicillin was known to folk medicine” (O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 696). Yet there it stops, which furthers the novel’s anachronisms: why would a medical student complaining of changes in the medical scene mention the wonders of penicillin, but not new strains of penicillin-resistant bacteria? An article on the dangers of antibiotic-resistant bacteria was placed above the Cruiskeen Lawn column of 4 February, 1956, and it is extremely unlikely that a man of O’Nolan’s poor health would have been unaware of the cracks in the antibiotic age (Medical Correspondent, “The Doctors Think Again,” The Irish Times, 4 February, 1956, 8). Is the novel set, then, in a reassuring time when antibiotics remained an untroubled cure? Or in raising penicillin at all does O’Nolan presume that antibiotic resistance goes without saying, which thereby reminds readers of the absence of perfect weapons of destruction or cure, be they De Selby’s D.M.P. or antibiotics?46. na gCopaleen, “In Flew Ensa,” 8.47. Brian O’Nolan to Timothy O’Keeffe, Collected Letters, 252.48. Brian O’Nolan to Leslie Daiken, Collected Letters, 260.49. An Roinn Sláinte, Tuarascáil ar Staidreamh Beatha 1961. On 8 February the Irish Times reported that “During the last three weeks, 68 people died in Dublin as a direct result of the influenza epidemic. Of this number, 43 died from influenza pneumonia” (“‘Flu Caused 68 Deaths,” The Irish Times, 8 February, 1961, 1).50. Brian O’Nolan to Leslie Daiken, Collected Letters, 266.51. O’Brien, The Dalkey Archive, 707.52. O’Brien, The Complete Novels, 668.53. Ibid. 613.54. Ibid., 687.55. Ibid.56. Ibid.57. Ibid. 621, (italics mine).58. Ibid. 635.59. Ibid. 766.60. Ibid. 768.61. Niall Montgomery to John Lincoln “Jack” Sweeney, Collected Letters, xv.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Marsden Fund of the Royal Society of New Zealand
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