{"title":"流行病表现中的哥特式元素:博里斯拉夫·佩基奇的《狂犬病》","authors":"Ana Kocić Stanković, M. Mitić","doi":"10.12697/il.2022.27.1.3","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The paper deals with the Gothic elements in the representation of a pandemic based on the 1983 novel Besnilo (‘Rabies’) by Serbian author Borislav Pekic. The authors start from the premise that the elements ‘borrowed’ from the Gothic genre play a key role in creating the main plot of the novel: a catastrophe caused by an extremely contagious and deadly man-manipulated version of the rabies virus. The theoretical framework is based on Fred Botting’s (1995) and Jerrold E. Hogle’s (2002) views of Gothic writing as a diffused mode that exceeds genres and categories and contributes its various elements to various literary forms. Furthermore, Gothic elements characteristic of Gothic science fiction, such as madness, monstrosity, the Mad Scientist, people meddling with nature with catastrophic consequences, the apocalyptic vision of human future and “the removal of man from his natural, living state and entry instead into a state of being neither completely human or monster, and neither fully alive or completely dead” (MacArthur 2015: 79) are traced in the novel and analysed in the context of literary representations of a pandemic. As Pekic’s novel is a mixture of various genres and is often defined and described as a horror thriller novel, an attempt is made to offer a new reading that would consider its constituent Gothic elements against a backdrop of the deeply and inherently human drama of the everlasting struggle between good and evil. Thus, pandemics are represented as a kind of catalyst that exposes both deeply human and rational, and deeply inhuman and irrational, impulses, leaving the final outcome of that struggle uncertain.","PeriodicalId":41069,"journal":{"name":"Interlitteraria","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-08-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Gothic Elements in Representations of a Pandemic: Borislav Pekic’s Rabies\",\"authors\":\"Ana Kocić Stanković, M. Mitić\",\"doi\":\"10.12697/il.2022.27.1.3\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The paper deals with the Gothic elements in the representation of a pandemic based on the 1983 novel Besnilo (‘Rabies’) by Serbian author Borislav Pekic. The authors start from the premise that the elements ‘borrowed’ from the Gothic genre play a key role in creating the main plot of the novel: a catastrophe caused by an extremely contagious and deadly man-manipulated version of the rabies virus. The theoretical framework is based on Fred Botting’s (1995) and Jerrold E. Hogle’s (2002) views of Gothic writing as a diffused mode that exceeds genres and categories and contributes its various elements to various literary forms. Furthermore, Gothic elements characteristic of Gothic science fiction, such as madness, monstrosity, the Mad Scientist, people meddling with nature with catastrophic consequences, the apocalyptic vision of human future and “the removal of man from his natural, living state and entry instead into a state of being neither completely human or monster, and neither fully alive or completely dead” (MacArthur 2015: 79) are traced in the novel and analysed in the context of literary representations of a pandemic. As Pekic’s novel is a mixture of various genres and is often defined and described as a horror thriller novel, an attempt is made to offer a new reading that would consider its constituent Gothic elements against a backdrop of the deeply and inherently human drama of the everlasting struggle between good and evil. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文讨论了塞尔维亚作家鲍里斯拉夫·佩基奇(Borislav Pekic)于1983年出版的小说《狂犬病》(Besnilo)所描绘的大流行中的哥特式元素。作者从一个前提出发,即从哥特式小说中“借用”的元素在小说的主要情节中发挥了关键作用:一场由一种极具传染性和致命的人为狂犬病病毒引起的灾难。理论框架是基于Fred Botting(1995)和Jerrold E. Hogle(2002)的观点,即哥特写作是一种超越类型和类别的扩散模式,并将其各种元素贡献给各种文学形式。此外,哥特式科幻小说的哥特式元素,如疯狂,怪物,疯狂的科学家,人们对自然的干预和灾难性的后果,人类未来的世界末日愿景,以及“将人从自然的生活状态中移除,进入一种既不是完全的人也不是怪物,既不是完全活着也不是完全死亡的状态”(MacArthur 2015):79)在小说中被追溯,并在大流行的文学表现的背景下被分析。由于Pekic的小说是多种体裁的混合体,通常被定义为恐怖惊悚小说,因此我们试图提供一种新的阅读方式,将其构成的哥特式元素与人类内心深处的善与恶之间永恒斗争的戏剧作为背景。因此,大流行病被描述为一种催化剂,它暴露了人性和理性、人性和非理性的冲动,使斗争的最终结果不确定。
Gothic Elements in Representations of a Pandemic: Borislav Pekic’s Rabies
The paper deals with the Gothic elements in the representation of a pandemic based on the 1983 novel Besnilo (‘Rabies’) by Serbian author Borislav Pekic. The authors start from the premise that the elements ‘borrowed’ from the Gothic genre play a key role in creating the main plot of the novel: a catastrophe caused by an extremely contagious and deadly man-manipulated version of the rabies virus. The theoretical framework is based on Fred Botting’s (1995) and Jerrold E. Hogle’s (2002) views of Gothic writing as a diffused mode that exceeds genres and categories and contributes its various elements to various literary forms. Furthermore, Gothic elements characteristic of Gothic science fiction, such as madness, monstrosity, the Mad Scientist, people meddling with nature with catastrophic consequences, the apocalyptic vision of human future and “the removal of man from his natural, living state and entry instead into a state of being neither completely human or monster, and neither fully alive or completely dead” (MacArthur 2015: 79) are traced in the novel and analysed in the context of literary representations of a pandemic. As Pekic’s novel is a mixture of various genres and is often defined and described as a horror thriller novel, an attempt is made to offer a new reading that would consider its constituent Gothic elements against a backdrop of the deeply and inherently human drama of the everlasting struggle between good and evil. Thus, pandemics are represented as a kind of catalyst that exposes both deeply human and rational, and deeply inhuman and irrational, impulses, leaving the final outcome of that struggle uncertain.