面对剩下的殖民者:约拿作为一个象征性的创伤叙事

IF 0.2 3区 哲学 0 RELIGION CATHOLIC BIBLICAL QUARTERLY Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1353/cbq.2023.0002
L. Claassens
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:学者们普遍认识到《约拿书》的殖民背景,其中包括对早已逝去的亚述帝国的模糊表述。此外,这本书的帝国背景导致口译员在自己的地方发言。例如,在对约拿的后殖民阅读中,Chesung Justin Ryu从他的韩国背景中阅读约拿,韩国背景仍然因被日本殖民而留下深刻创伤。因此,早已逝去的殖民者所造成的伤害可以说延续了好几代人,因为子孙后代不可避免地要应对殖民主义的影响。在与当代文学创伤理论的对话中,我考虑了与《约拿书》相关的创伤和殖民主义的交叉点,此外,我还探索了文学,特别是叙事,可以为克服创伤提供一个安全的空间的方式——人们可以说是面对殖民者,无论是真实的还是想象的。这样阅读,《约拿书》可以被视为一种象征性的创伤叙事,它受到帝国背景的影响,但也以独特的方式寻求接受一系列帝国造成的创伤。
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Facing the Colonizer That Remains: Jonah as a Symbolic Trauma Narrative
Abstract:Scholars have widely recognized the colonial setting of the Book of Jonah, which includes the ambiguity of speaking of an Assyrian Empire that is long gone. The imperial setting of this book, moreover, has led interpreters to speak from their own place. For instance, in his postcolonial reading of Jonah, Chesung Justin Ryu reads Jonah in terms of his South Korean context, which continues to harbor deep wounds from being colonized by Japan. The harm done by colonizers long gone can thus be said to extend over many generations, as future generations inevitably have to deal with the effects of colonialism. In conversation with contemporary literary trauma theory, I consider this intersection of trauma and colonialism associated with the Book of Jonah and, furthermore, explore the way in which literature, and specifically narratives, may offer a safe space for working through trauma—one could say to face the colonizer, both real and imagined. Read in this way, the Book of Jonah may be viewed as a symbolic trauma narrative that is shaped by its imperial context but also in distinctive ways seeks to come to terms with the trauma wrought by a succession of empires.
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