简介:超越危机时代的新未来

IF 0.5 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE STUDIES IN THE NOVEL Pub Date : 2023-11-29 DOI:10.1353/sdn.2023.a913300
Angela Yang Du, Tara MacDonald
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I don’t want to take my time over how great I am.” When Mnuchin protested that, according to the rules, he should not be interrupted, Waters reminded him that, according to the same rules, “when you’re on my time, I can reclaim it” (“User Clip”). Although Waters invoked House procedural rules, which honor a representative’s time allotment when given the floor, a Black woman’s refusal to yield her time to a white, male colleague resonated powerfully with many who were fed up with electoral tensions, misogyny, and racism.</p> <p>“Reclaiming my time” would continue to be an apt anthem a few years later, when the World Health Organization officially declared the spread of COVID-19 a pandemic.<sup>1</sup> The global crisis, which officially ended in May 2023, was (and is) marked by multiple kinds of lost, fractured, and precarious time: postponed or cancelled social gatherings, developmental delays in children and adolescents, the juggling of multiple jobs due to mass unemployment, the simultaneity of caregiving while working from home, the uncertainty of the pandemic’s length, and, of course, the cumulative cases of illness and death. This period was also marked by intense racial and political protests around the world. While these typically responded to incidents of social injustice, they also reminded people <strong>[End Page 365]</strong> of chronic conditions underlying present violence: historically disenfranchised groups did not necessarily register “the new normal” as a disruption.</p> <p>The normalization of inequity during COVID-19’s spread was deeply gendered. Women across multiple sectors struggled with the competing demands of work and increased caregiving duties (Oleschuk, Squazzoni), resulting in a “shecession” (Gupta, Elting). Moreover, Black women were (and remain) disproportionately tasked with the labor of providing essential care, fighting racism, and performing what Christina Sharpe calls “wake work” (17). The pandemic confirmed what was already widely accepted: in a crisis, feminine, racialized, and marginalized bodies are asked to yield their time to perform more affective and domestic labor in the hopes that this work preserves some sense of normalcy. Sara Ahmed reminds us that, when time is shared, inequality is “manifest in how some take up time; time taken up can be time taken away from others” (55). Given the normalization of this inequity, how can these subjects “reclaim time”? What stories are told about time as given, taken, owned, or shared?</p> <p>These and other questions were part of our conversation back in 2021, when we, the editors, first discussed gendered experiences of time. As fellow Victorianists with shared interests in the novel, feminist narrative theory, and temporality, and as women academics working in North American institutions, we shared professional and personal investments in gendered claims to time. “Strange times” became a pandemic slogan conveying both the period’s unpredictability and the sense that our collective and individual relations to time had altered. Despite the apparent novelty of this experience (due in part to the sheer scope of COVID-19), scholars of queer, feminist, and trans studies have long demonstrated that “strange temporalities” structure social groups. We borrow the phrase “strange temporalities” from Jack Halberstam, who declared back in 2005, “If we try to think about queerness as an outcome of strange temporalities, imaginative life schedules, and eccentric economic practices, we detach queerness from sexual identity” (1).<sup>2</sup> In accordance with this understanding, “queerness...has the potential to open up new life narratives and alternative relations to time and space” (1–2). More recently, the phrase “strange temporalities” appears in Ahmed’s monograph on the material histories of how we use objects, ideas, and words (9). In her conclusion, she reflects upon “queer use,” meaning the use of something for which or for whom it was not intended (199). 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Mnuchin had been responding to Waters’s question about a letter from her office with compliments and platitudes, a tactic that Waters recognized as stonewalling: “Thank you very much. I don’t want to take my time over how great I am.” When Mnuchin protested that, according to the rules, he should not be interrupted, Waters reminded him that, according to the same rules, “when you’re on my time, I can reclaim it” (“User Clip”). Although Waters invoked House procedural rules, which honor a representative’s time allotment when given the floor, a Black woman’s refusal to yield her time to a white, male colleague resonated powerfully with many who were fed up with electoral tensions, misogyny, and racism.</p> <p>“Reclaiming my time” would continue to be an apt anthem a few years later, when the World Health Organization officially declared the spread of COVID-19 a pandemic.<sup>1</sup> The global crisis, which officially ended in May 2023, was (and is) marked by multiple kinds of lost, fractured, and precarious time: postponed or cancelled social gatherings, developmental delays in children and adolescents, the juggling of multiple jobs due to mass unemployment, the simultaneity of caregiving while working from home, the uncertainty of the pandemic’s length, and, of course, the cumulative cases of illness and death. This period was also marked by intense racial and political protests around the world. 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Despite the apparent novelty of this experience (due in part to the sheer scope of COVID-19), scholars of queer, feminist, and trans studies have long demonstrated that “strange temporalities” structure social groups. We borrow the phrase “strange temporalities” from Jack Halberstam, who declared back in 2005, “If we try to think about queerness as an outcome of strange temporalities, imaginative life schedules, and eccentric economic practices, we detach queerness from sexual identity” (1).<sup>2</sup> In accordance with this understanding, “queerness...has the potential to open up new life narratives and alternative relations to time and space” (1–2). More recently, the phrase “strange temporalities” appears in Ahmed’s monograph on the material histories of how we use objects, ideas, and words (9). In her conclusion, she reflects upon “queer use,” meaning the use of something for which or for whom it was not intended (199). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简短摘录,而不是摘要:引言:危机时代之外的小说未来安吉拉·杨杜(传记)和塔拉·麦克唐纳(传记)“收回我的时间,收回我的时间,收回我的时间。在2017年的美国委员会听证会上,国会女议员马克辛·沃特斯用这句臭名昭著的话打断了财政部长史蒂文·姆努钦的话。姆努钦一直在用赞美和陈词滥调来回答沃特斯关于她办公室的一封信的问题,沃特斯认为这种策略是在敷衍:“非常感谢。我不想浪费时间去想我有多伟大。”当姆努钦抗议说,根据规定,他不应该被打断时,沃特斯提醒他,根据同样的规定,“当你占用我的时间时,我可以收回它”(《用户剪辑》)。尽管沃特斯援引了众议院的程序规则,即在获得发言机会时尊重代表的时间分配,但一名黑人女性拒绝把时间让给一名白人男性同事,这在许多受够了选举紧张局势、厌女症和种族主义的人心中引起了强烈共鸣。几年后,当世界卫生组织正式宣布COVID-19的传播为大流行时,“夺回我的时间”仍然是一首恰当的赞歌这场全球危机于2023年5月正式结束,过去(现在也是)以多种失落、断裂和不稳定的时间为特征:社交聚会推迟或取消,儿童和青少年发育迟缓,大规模失业导致的多份工作,在家工作的同时照顾他人,大流行持续时间的不确定性,当然还有累积的疾病和死亡病例。这一时期也是世界各地激烈的种族和政治抗议活动的标志。虽然这些事件通常是对社会不公正事件的反应,但它们也提醒人们当前暴力背后的慢性条件:历史上被剥夺公民权的群体不一定把“新常态”视为一种破坏。在2019冠状病毒病传播期间,不平等现象的正常化深受性别影响。各行各业的妇女都在努力应对工作的竞争性需求和照料责任的增加(Oleschuk, Squazzoni),导致“女性衰退”(Gupta, Elting)。此外,黑人妇女过去(现在仍然)承担着不成比例的提供基本护理、反对种族主义和执行克里斯蒂娜·夏普(Christina Sharpe)所说的“唤醒工作”的任务。这场大流行证实了已经被广泛接受的事实:在危机中,女性化、种族化和边缘化的身体被要求腾出时间来从事更多的情感和家务劳动,希望这项工作能保持某种正常感。萨拉·艾哈迈德提醒我们,当时间被分享时,不平等“体现在一些人如何占用时间;占用的时间可以是占用别人的时间”(55)。考虑到这种不平等的常态化,这些主体如何“收回时间”?关于时间,有哪些故事是关于给予、占有、拥有或分享的?这些问题和其他问题是我们在2021年对话的一部分,当时我们编辑们首次讨论了时间的性别体验。作为同为维多利亚时代的人,我们对小说、女权主义叙事理论和时间性有着共同的兴趣,作为在北美机构工作的女性学者,我们在对时间的性别主张方面有着共同的专业和个人投入。“奇怪的时代”成为一个流行的口号,既传达了那个时代的不可预测性,也传达了我们集体和个人与时间的关系已经改变的感觉。尽管这种经历看起来很新奇(部分原因是COVID-19的范围太广),但酷儿、女权主义者和跨性别研究的学者们早就证明,“奇怪的时间性”构成了社会群体。我们借用杰克·哈伯斯坦(Jack Halberstam)的说法“奇怪的时间性”(strange temporalities),他早在2005年就宣称,“如果我们试图把酷儿看作是奇怪的时间性、富有想象力的生活安排和古怪的经济实践的结果,我们就把酷儿从性别认同中分离出来了”(1)根据这种理解,“酷儿……有可能打开新的生活叙事和时间和空间的替代关系”(1-2)。最近,“奇怪的时间性”一词出现在艾哈迈德关于我们如何使用物体、思想和词语的物质历史的专著中(9)。在她的结论中,她反思了“奇怪的使用”,意思是使用某物的目的或目的不是为了谁(199)。艾哈迈德提醒我们……
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Introduction: Novel Futures Beyond Times of Crisis
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Introduction: Novel Futures Beyond Times of Crisis
  • Angela Yang Du (bio) and Tara MacDonald (bio)

“Reclaiming my time, reclaiming my time, reclaiming my time.”

– Maxine Waters, 2017

During a United States committee hearing in 2017, Congresswoman Maxine Waters interrupted Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin with this now notorious phrase. Mnuchin had been responding to Waters’s question about a letter from her office with compliments and platitudes, a tactic that Waters recognized as stonewalling: “Thank you very much. I don’t want to take my time over how great I am.” When Mnuchin protested that, according to the rules, he should not be interrupted, Waters reminded him that, according to the same rules, “when you’re on my time, I can reclaim it” (“User Clip”). Although Waters invoked House procedural rules, which honor a representative’s time allotment when given the floor, a Black woman’s refusal to yield her time to a white, male colleague resonated powerfully with many who were fed up with electoral tensions, misogyny, and racism.

“Reclaiming my time” would continue to be an apt anthem a few years later, when the World Health Organization officially declared the spread of COVID-19 a pandemic.1 The global crisis, which officially ended in May 2023, was (and is) marked by multiple kinds of lost, fractured, and precarious time: postponed or cancelled social gatherings, developmental delays in children and adolescents, the juggling of multiple jobs due to mass unemployment, the simultaneity of caregiving while working from home, the uncertainty of the pandemic’s length, and, of course, the cumulative cases of illness and death. This period was also marked by intense racial and political protests around the world. While these typically responded to incidents of social injustice, they also reminded people [End Page 365] of chronic conditions underlying present violence: historically disenfranchised groups did not necessarily register “the new normal” as a disruption.

The normalization of inequity during COVID-19’s spread was deeply gendered. Women across multiple sectors struggled with the competing demands of work and increased caregiving duties (Oleschuk, Squazzoni), resulting in a “shecession” (Gupta, Elting). Moreover, Black women were (and remain) disproportionately tasked with the labor of providing essential care, fighting racism, and performing what Christina Sharpe calls “wake work” (17). The pandemic confirmed what was already widely accepted: in a crisis, feminine, racialized, and marginalized bodies are asked to yield their time to perform more affective and domestic labor in the hopes that this work preserves some sense of normalcy. Sara Ahmed reminds us that, when time is shared, inequality is “manifest in how some take up time; time taken up can be time taken away from others” (55). Given the normalization of this inequity, how can these subjects “reclaim time”? What stories are told about time as given, taken, owned, or shared?

These and other questions were part of our conversation back in 2021, when we, the editors, first discussed gendered experiences of time. As fellow Victorianists with shared interests in the novel, feminist narrative theory, and temporality, and as women academics working in North American institutions, we shared professional and personal investments in gendered claims to time. “Strange times” became a pandemic slogan conveying both the period’s unpredictability and the sense that our collective and individual relations to time had altered. Despite the apparent novelty of this experience (due in part to the sheer scope of COVID-19), scholars of queer, feminist, and trans studies have long demonstrated that “strange temporalities” structure social groups. We borrow the phrase “strange temporalities” from Jack Halberstam, who declared back in 2005, “If we try to think about queerness as an outcome of strange temporalities, imaginative life schedules, and eccentric economic practices, we detach queerness from sexual identity” (1).2 In accordance with this understanding, “queerness...has the potential to open up new life narratives and alternative relations to time and space” (1–2). More recently, the phrase “strange temporalities” appears in Ahmed’s monograph on the material histories of how we use objects, ideas, and words (9). In her conclusion, she reflects upon “queer use,” meaning the use of something for which or for whom it was not intended (199). While Ahmed reminds us that...

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来源期刊
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL LITERATURE-
CiteScore
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28
期刊介绍: From its inception, Studies in the Novel has been dedicated to building a scholarly community around the world-making potentialities of the novel. Studies in the Novel started as an idea among several members of the English Department of the University of North Texas during the summer of 1965. They determined that there was a need for a journal “devoted to publishing critical and scholarly articles on the novel with no restrictions on either chronology or nationality of the novelists studied.” The founding editor, University of North Texas professor of contemporary literature James W. Lee, envisioned a journal of international scope and influence. Since then, Studies in the Novel has staked its reputation upon publishing incisive scholarship on the canon-forming and cutting-edge novelists that have shaped the genre’s rich history. The journal continues to break new ground by promoting new theoretical approaches, a broader international scope, and an engagement with the contemporary novel as a form of social critique.
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