“Unembedded,消失了”:

Q2 Arts and Humanities Authorship Pub Date : 2021-06-30 DOI:10.21825/aj.v10i1.20636
L. York
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引用次数: 0

摘要

马琳·诺贝斯·菲利普(Marlene NourbeSe Philip)在她的文章中直言不讳地说,她是“加拿大一位未被埋没的、消失的诗人和作家”,她对文化生活的贡献受到了系统性的阻碍,部分原因是她代表黑人社区的公共行动主义。她的知名度是一种矛盾的、令人困惑的消失和非自愿的高度可见度的结合,而这种高度可见度主要是由于对她作为文化活动家的工作的彻底误解和鄙弃。在这篇文章中,我研究了马琳·诺贝斯·菲利普的文学和活动家生涯是如何“嵌入的,消失的”,但现在,可见的,可听到的,挑战了加拿大流行的作者概念。特别是,我想菲利普的超可见的不可见性是如何以及为什么对往往定义文学名人的可见性制度提出挑战的。任何关于名人知名度的解释都需要认识到这样一个事实,即知名度的影响和后果并不是对所有公众人物都有影响,正如凯瑟琳·麦基特里克、珍妮·伯曼、莎拉·j·杰克逊和托尼·莫里森的理论所证明的那样。名人知名度也不是二元性的,名人研究经常提出的非此即彼的命题:要么是非常渴望的好事(崇拜的观众),要么是受人唾弃的坏事,比如在臭名昭著的情况下,或者在过度侵入、不受欢迎的公众关注的情况下。相反,我们需要认真考虑能见度可能被系统性地否认,也可能作为压迫性的过度能见度被重新强加的方式,就像我认为的那样,在马琳·诺贝斯·菲利普(Marlene NourbeSe Philip)的名人身上,以及延伸到许多种族化的公众人物身上。
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“Unembedded, Disappeared”:
In her essays, Marlene NourbeSe Philip has been forthcoming about being “an unembedded, disappeared poet and writer in Canada” whose contributions to cultural life have been systematically obstructed, partly because of her public activism on behalf of Black communities. Her visibility is an oxymoronic, bedeviling combination of disappearance and unchosen hypervisibility, with the hypervisibility largely brought about by a radical misunderstanding and abjection of her work as a cultural activist. In this article, I examine how the “embedded, disappeared” and yet present, visible, audible literary and activist career of Marlene NourbeSe Philip challenges prevailing conceptions of authorship in Canada. In particular, I think about how and why Philip’s hypervisible invisibility offers a challenge to the regimes of visibility which tend to define literary celebrity. Any account of celebrity visibility needs to recognise the fact that the implications and consequences of visibility do not sit evenly on all public persons, as the theories of Katherine McKittrick, Jenny Burman, Sarah J. Jackson, and Toni Morrison testify. Neither is celebrity visibility the dualistic, either/or proposition so frequently framed by celebrity studies: either a much-desired good (an adoring audience) or a reviled evil, as in instances of notoriety, or in cases of overly intrusive, unwanted public attention. Instead, we need to reckon seriously with the ways visibility may be both systemically denied and reimposed as oppressive hypervisibility, as I argue it is in the celebrity of Marlene NourbeSe Philip and, by extension, in that of many racialised public figures.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
24 weeks
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