“我的生命之书是一本声音之书”:菲利普·罗斯及其小说的血脉

Q2 Arts and Humanities Philip Roth Studies Pub Date : 2019-05-25 DOI:10.5703/PHILROTHSTUD.15.1.0098
C. Morley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当然,菲利普·罗斯作品的简洁、有力、活力以及丰富而粗鲁的味道都得到了充分的证明。在他死后的无数新闻特写中,评论家、学者和朋友们都在反思他疯狂的写作节奏,以及他作品中充满的幽默、尖刻和愤怒。当然,即使是最持怀疑态度的读者也不能否认,罗斯的散文中充满了独特的刻薄和野蛮的能量,正如他的朋友戴维·黑尔(David Hare)所观察到的那样,无论在哪里,罗斯的散文都是针对虚伪的。然而,对我来说,罗斯作品的吸引力不仅在于它的活力和能量,还在于它的深度、复杂性、道德和历史的深度。人们经常用愤怒、有趣、性感或动人来形容他的书;但我认为罗斯作品的命脉不仅仅是持久的愤怒或激情。更确切地说,这是他在整个小说生涯中与他的祖先,文学或其他方面的持续接触。这种活力表现在两方面:一是他从不羞于承认的大量文学影响,二是他对人物的各种描绘,这些人物根据塑造他们的人来评价他们的生活在我第一次见到罗斯独特的声音的书《我嫁给了一个共产主义者》(1998)中,这些表现的第一种表现最为明显。回想起他的一生和造就他的友谊,老内森·祖克曼回忆道:
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"The Book of My Life is a Book of Voices": Philip Roth and the Bloodlines of his Fiction
The brio, the punch, the vigor, and the rich, rude tang of Philip Roth’s writing have, of course, been well documented. In the innumerable news features after his death, critics, scholars, and friends reflected on the frenetic pace of his writing, as well as the humor, the vitriol, and the anger that informed his work. And surely not even the most skeptical reader can deny that Roth’s prose throbs with a uniquely caustic and savage energy, which, as his friend David Hare has observed, was directed towards skewering hypocrisy wherever he saw it. For me, though, the appeal of Roth’s writing lies not just in its vigor and energy, but in its depth, its sophistication, its moral and historical profundity. People often describe his books as angry, funny, sexy, or moving; but I think the lifeblood of Roth’s work is more than just an abiding wrath or lustiness. Rather it is his sustained engagement, throughout his career in fiction, with his ancestors, literary or otherwise. This energy manifests itself in two ways: in the raft of literary influences to which he was never shy of admitting, and in the various representations of characters who assess their lives in terms of those who have formed them.1 The first of these manifestations is nowhere more evident than in the book in which I first encountered Roth’s distinctive voice, I Married a Communist (1998). Contemplating his life and the friendships that have formed him, an older Nathan Zuckerman reflects:
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Philip Roth Studies
Philip Roth Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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