文学理论中的冒险与偶然

IF 0.2 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE NEOHELICON Pub Date : 2024-03-06 DOI:10.1007/s11059-024-00724-1
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要 冒险与偶然性之间的关系是矛盾的。雅各布-格林(Jacob Grimm)将âventiure(德语中的法语外来词)区分为 "gebenheit "和 "erzählte geschichte selfbst",慕尼黑探险语言学研究小组将其称为 "事件类型 "和 "叙事模式"。一方面,探险作为一种事件类型,其偶然性因素显然是重要的先决条件。冒险者必须心甘情愿地将自己暴露在这一偶然事件中,并将其解释为 "机会"(又是用法语外来词在德语中的用法),即通过冒险获得利益的机会,无论是单纯的资本--如这个词的经济学用法,从英国的 "商人冒险家 "到当代的 "风险资本"--还是名誉或声望--如中世纪和现代早期的冒险史诗和小说。另一方面,冒险作为一种叙事模式,倾向于减少偶然性,以便 "合情合理"。即使冒险故事容忍并实际上支持插叙结构,但这些插叙毕竟必须有动机并与情节相结合。换句话说:撰写冒险故事总是意味着要驯服(或者说框架)它所基于的偶然性。因此,探险故事是 "消除其所涉及的文学现象的偶然性部分"(杜普拉特和乔丹,本特刊导言)的典型案例。然而,这种紧张关系在文学理论史上却很少得到承认--在此从早期现代诗学的长时段来看。本文讨论了相关理论史的一些步骤,特别强调了乔治-阿甘本(Giorgio Agamben)最近对冒险的讴歌。
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Adventure and contingency in literary theory

Abstract

The relation between adventure and contingency is an ambivalent one. This ambivalence can be described by using a distinction of two aspects already tied together in âventiure (as a French foreign word in German), distinguished by Jacob Grimm as “begebenheit” versus “erzählte geschichte selbst,” rendered as ‘type of event’ versus ‘narrative pattern’ in the terminology of the Munich research group Philology of Adventure. On the one hand, it seems obvious that for an adventure, as a type of event, a contingent element is a crucial precondition. An adventurous agent must willingly expose himself to this contingent event and interpret it as a ‘Chance’ (using a French foreign word in German, again), i.e. as opportunity to gain by risking, be it simply capital—as in the economic usage of the word, from English ‘Merchant Adventurers’ to contemporary ‘Venture Capital’—, or be it fame or prestige—as in Medieval and Early Modern adventure epics and novels. On the other hand, adventure, as a narrative pattern, tends to reduce contingencies in order to ‘make sense’. Even if adventure tales tolerate and actually support episodic structures, these episodes must, after all, be motivated and integrated into a plot. In other words: Writing an adventure story always already implies to tame (or perhaps rather frame) the very contingency it is based on. Adventure stories are therefore typical cases of “eliminat[ing] the contingent part of the literary phenomena it deals with” (Duprat and Jordan, introduction to the present special issue). This tension is, however, rarely acknowledged in the history of literary theory—here taken in the longue durée, starting with Early Modern poetics. The present essay discusses some steps from the history of relevant theories, with a particular emphasis on Giorgio Agamben's recent eulogy of adventure.

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来源期刊
NEOHELICON
NEOHELICON LITERATURE-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: Neohelicon welcomes studies on all aspects of comparative and world literature, critical theory and practice.  In the discussion of literary historical topics (including literary movements, epochs, or regions), analytical contributions based on a solidly-anchored methodology are preferred.
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