北如西:卡累利阿的文学形象与苏联后期的外向型实践

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Imagologiya i Komparativistika-Imagology and Comparative Studies Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.17223/24099554/18/17
Natalya L. Shilova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文考察了卡累利阿在苏联后期文学表现中的特殊性。这项研究涉及尤里·卡扎科夫、安德烈·沃兹涅先斯基、贝拉·阿赫玛杜丽娜、列夫·奥泽罗夫、维克多·斯塔科夫等人的文本,这些文本是根据20世纪60年代到80年代期间对卡累利阿的旅行而写的。对于来自其他地区的作家和诗人来说,这个地区的历史和文化特征往往变得非常重要。这些特点(双语、文化对话、历史和地理上决定的欧洲影响)强调了该地区在俄罗斯北部其他领土背景下的独特性。反映该地区的特殊性——自然和文化——形成了20世纪60年代末至80年代初散文和歌词的总体基调,诗歌具有现实主义色彩。卡累利阿在这一时期形成的文学形象的一些细节(包括旅行的主题、芬兰-乌戈尔和斯堪的纳维亚的现实和地名)反映了苏联后期的“外部”实践(罗斯。vnenakhodimost,由Alexei Yurchak提出),以及早期后浪漫主义主题的发展。在奥泽罗夫、沃兹涅先斯基、斯塔科夫的散文和歌词中,对卡累利阿之旅的描绘获得了时间旅行的特征,人物与古代/永恒的接触。这个角色的位置与他们所处的时代有关,这与苏联人民在没有直接抵抗或反对意识形态体系的情况下逃离令人困扰的日常现实的时期所形成的机制有关。在Kazakov和Akhmadullina的卡累利阿情节中,由于引入了芬兰-乌戈尔的地名、动机和词汇,这个地方的形象有时获得了“我们的国外”、“想象中的西方”的特征。与西方不同的是,卡累利阿并不完全是虚构的:人们可以访问它,亲眼看到它,就像苏联的波罗的海国家一样。同时,卡累利阿之旅与意识形态上可接受和认可的国内旅游和北方文学探索的做法是一致的。在这种情况下,“想象中的西方”的特征有机地包含在卡累利阿在苏联后期文学表现中的浪漫化和神话化的总体趋势中,发展和复杂了19世纪形成的形象。卡累利阿的文化多元性显然对具有异质文化的这一代作者具有吸引力,这种文化有时结合了相反的倾向(对西方和东方的兴趣,对过去和未来的兴趣,对物理和歌词的兴趣,对社会主义和人类面孔的兴趣,等等),并塑造了外在的实践。流行作家的文学作品广泛传播了这一形象,在读者中传播。作者声明没有利益冲突。
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North as West: The literary image of Karelia and the late Soviet outsideness practice
The article examines the peculiarities of the literary representation of Karelia in the late Soviet literature. The research involves texts by Yury Kazakov, Andrey Voznesensky, Bella Akhmadulina, Lev Ozerov, Viktor Starkov, and others, which were written based on trips to Karelia in the period from the 1960s to the 1980s. The historical and cultural features of the area often became significant for writers and poets who came from other regions. These features (bilingualism, dialogue of cultures, historically and geographically determined European influence) emphasized the region’s uniqueness against the background of other territories of the North of Russia. Reflection of the specificity of the region - both natural and cultural - forms the general tone of the essays and lyrics of the late 1960s - early 1980s, realistic in their poetics. Some details of the literary image of Karelia that developed during this period (including the motif of travel, Finno-Ugric and Scandinavian realities and toponyms) reflect the late Soviet practices of “outsideness” (Rus. vnenakhodimost’, a term by Alexei Yurchak), in addition to the development of earlier post-romantic topics. In Ozerov’s, Voznesensky’s, Starkov’s prose and lyrics, the representation of a journey to Karelia acquires the features of time travel, the character’s contact with antiquity/eternity. This position of the character in relation to their time correlates with the mechanisms that developed during that period of the Soviet people’s escape from the haunting day-to-day reality without direct resistance or opposition to the ideological system. In Kazakov’s and Akhmadullina’s Karelian plots, due to the introduction of Finno-Ugric place names, motives, vocabulary, the image of the place sometimes acquires the features of “our abroad,” the “imaginary West.” Unlike the West itself, Karelia was not exclusively imaginary: one could visit it and see it with one’s own eyes, just like the Soviet Baltic states. A trip to Karelia was at the same time consistent with the ideologically acceptable and approved practices of domestic tourism and literary exploration of the North. The features of the “imaginary West” in this case were organically included in the general tendency of romanticizing and mythologizing Karelia in its literary representation of the late Soviet period, developing and complicating the image that had formed back in the 19th century. The cultural multilayeredness of Karelia is obviously attractive for the generation of authors of the Thaw with its heterogeneous culture, which sometimes combined opposite tendencies (interest in the West and the East, in the past and the future, physics and lyrics, socialism and the human face, etc.) and shaped the practice of outsideness. The literary texts of popular authors widely broadcast this image, spreading it among readers. The author declares no conflicts of interests.
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