Jennifer Eun Jung Row的《酷炫的速度:现代早期舞台上的时间、性和生物力量》(评论)

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE, ROMANCE ESPRIT CREATEUR Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1353/esp.2023.a901825
Michael Meere
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Rather than write about time in general, however, Row focuses specifically on “queer velocities” (non-normative directions and speeds at the micro-levels of diegesis, performance, and rhetoric), to suggest that they are intricately related to the “intertwined sociosexual dynamics of the early modern world” (p. 5). The result is a stimulating, insightful, provocative, and vital re-reading of canonical French drama. A review of this length cannot do justice to the complex and sophisticated analyses contained in Row’s book, including (but of course not limited to) tempo, erotic intimacy, and sexual identity in Isaac de Benserade’s Iphis et Iante (introduction); the unity of time, chronobiopolitics, and sexuality in Pierre Corneille’s Le Cid (chapter 1); delay, grieving, motherhood, and trauma in Jean Racine’s Andromaque (chapter 2); fanaticism, seduction, and martyrdom in Corneille’s Polyeucte (chapter 3); nonprogressive temporality, “circular velocity,” and polyamorous attachment in Racine’s Bérénice (chapter 4); and, finally, utopia and otherness in Voltaire’s Zaïre (conclusion). Row draws on the theory of Michel Foucault, José Esteban Muñoz, Elizabeth Freeman, Judith Butler, Sara Ahmed, Johannes Fabian, and many others. Row’s impressive erudition and adroit handling of complex (queer) theory is admirable and a breath of fresh air. Moreover, by selecting well-known plays written by men and with predominantly heterosexual storylines (save, perhaps, Benserade’s Iphis et Iante, though the story does revert to a heteronormative schema in the end), Row’s book cunningly queers the canon. What is more, by not following a strictly chronological timeline (the book jumps back and forth between Corneille’s earlier plays from the 1630s and 1640s and Racine’s tragedies of the 1660s and 1670s in chapters 1–4), the narrative thrust of the book deftly subverts time and playfully challenges many reader’s (normative) expectations. Row’s book will hopefully lead to more studies of the queerness of early modern French theater, including comedies, operas, and other plays that are less well-known, especially those penned by women, such as Françoise Pascal’s Le Vieillard amoureux (1662) or Françoise de Graffigny’s Phaza (1753). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这本重要的书中,Jennifer Eun Jung Row展示了现代法国早期最著名的剧作家以多种方式酷儿时代。事实上,尽管钟表等新颖的计时技术为现代早期欧洲的群众提供了新的训练方式,但剧院作为文本和建筑,提供了一个可以操纵时间的特权空间。戏剧的时间方面尤其重要,因为在亚里士多德诗学和17世纪法国戏剧理论的三个统一体(时间、行动和地点)中,时间是最基本的统一体。(行动和地点的统一取决于所谓的二十四小时规则,表明它们与“现代早期交织的社会性别动态”有着错综复杂的联系(第5页)。其结果是对法国经典戏剧进行了一次刺激、深刻、挑衅性和至关重要的重读。这样长的篇幅无法公正地评价罗的书中包含的复杂而复杂的分析,包括(当然不限于)艾萨克·德·本塞拉德的《Iphis et Iante》(引言)中的节奏、性亲密和性身份;Pierre Cornelle的《城市》(第一章)中时间、时间生物政治和性的统一;让·拉辛的《男主人公》中的延迟、悲伤、母性和创伤(第二章);科尼尔《聚酯》中的狂热、诱惑与殉道(第三章);Racine的Bérénice(第4章)中的非渐进时间性、“圆周速度”和多元依恋;最后,伏尔泰的《扎伊尔》(结论)中的乌托邦和另类。Row借鉴了Michel Foucault、JoséEsteban Muñoz、Elizabeth Freeman、Judith Butler、Sara Ahmed、Johannes Fabian和其他许多人的理论。罗令人印象深刻的学识和对复杂(奇怪)理论的娴熟处理令人钦佩,给人一股新鲜空气。此外,罗的书通过选择由男性创作的以异性恋为主的著名戏剧(也许除了本塞拉德的《伊菲思与安特》,尽管故事最终还是回到了一个非规范的模式),巧妙地颠覆了经典。更重要的是,这本书没有遵循严格的时间线(在第1-4章中,本书在科奈尔1630年代和1640年代的早期戏剧和拉辛1660年代和1670年代的悲剧之间来回跳跃),叙事主旨巧妙地颠覆了时间,开玩笑地挑战了许多读者的(规范)期望。罗的书有望对早期现代法国戏剧的怪异之处进行更多的研究,包括喜剧、歌剧和其他不太知名的戏剧,尤其是那些由女性创作的戏剧,如弗朗索瓦·帕斯卡的《爱的生活》(1662年)或弗朗索瓦·德·格拉芬尼的《法扎》(1753年)。与此同时,《酷儿速度论》应该被广泛阅读,并被视为如何融合当代(酷儿)理论和早期现代(法国)研究的一个例子。
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Queer Velocities: Time, Sex, and Biopower on the Early Modern Stage by Jennifer Eun-Jung Row (review)
In this important book, Jennifer Eun-Jung Row demonstrates the many ways in which the most famous early modern French playwrights queer time. Indeed, while novel timing technologies such as clocks and timepieces allowed for new ways of disciplining the masses in early modern Europe, the theater, both as text and edifice, provided a privileged space where time could be manipulated. This temporal aspect of the theater is especially crucial because, of the three unities in Aristotelian poetics and seventeenth-century French dramatic theory (time, action, and place), time is the most fundamental one. (The unities of action and place depend on the socalled twenty-four-hour rule.) Rather than write about time in general, however, Row focuses specifically on “queer velocities” (non-normative directions and speeds at the micro-levels of diegesis, performance, and rhetoric), to suggest that they are intricately related to the “intertwined sociosexual dynamics of the early modern world” (p. 5). The result is a stimulating, insightful, provocative, and vital re-reading of canonical French drama. A review of this length cannot do justice to the complex and sophisticated analyses contained in Row’s book, including (but of course not limited to) tempo, erotic intimacy, and sexual identity in Isaac de Benserade’s Iphis et Iante (introduction); the unity of time, chronobiopolitics, and sexuality in Pierre Corneille’s Le Cid (chapter 1); delay, grieving, motherhood, and trauma in Jean Racine’s Andromaque (chapter 2); fanaticism, seduction, and martyrdom in Corneille’s Polyeucte (chapter 3); nonprogressive temporality, “circular velocity,” and polyamorous attachment in Racine’s Bérénice (chapter 4); and, finally, utopia and otherness in Voltaire’s Zaïre (conclusion). Row draws on the theory of Michel Foucault, José Esteban Muñoz, Elizabeth Freeman, Judith Butler, Sara Ahmed, Johannes Fabian, and many others. Row’s impressive erudition and adroit handling of complex (queer) theory is admirable and a breath of fresh air. Moreover, by selecting well-known plays written by men and with predominantly heterosexual storylines (save, perhaps, Benserade’s Iphis et Iante, though the story does revert to a heteronormative schema in the end), Row’s book cunningly queers the canon. What is more, by not following a strictly chronological timeline (the book jumps back and forth between Corneille’s earlier plays from the 1630s and 1640s and Racine’s tragedies of the 1660s and 1670s in chapters 1–4), the narrative thrust of the book deftly subverts time and playfully challenges many reader’s (normative) expectations. Row’s book will hopefully lead to more studies of the queerness of early modern French theater, including comedies, operas, and other plays that are less well-known, especially those penned by women, such as Françoise Pascal’s Le Vieillard amoureux (1662) or Françoise de Graffigny’s Phaza (1753). In the meantime, Queer Velocities should be read widely and be held as an example of how to blend contemporary (queer) theory and early modern (French) studies.
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来源期刊
ESPRIT CREATEUR
ESPRIT CREATEUR LITERATURE, ROMANCE-
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: For more than forty years, L"Esprit Créateur has published studies on French and Francophone literature, film, criticism, and culture. The journal features articles representing a variety of methodologies and critical approaches. Exploring all periods of French literature and thought, L"Esprit Créateur focuses on topics that define French and Francophone Studies today.
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