帕特里克·布兰特林格:《黑暗的统治:英国文学与帝国主义,1830-1914》

Q4 Arts and Humanities Nineteenth Century Prose Pub Date : 1989-12-22 DOI:10.5860/choice.26-1376
D. David
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From Marryat's maritime tales of the 1830s through Thackeray's India, the literature of Botany Bay, and Orientalist fantasies of the latter quarter of the century, we arrive at Brantlinger's stunning genealogical chart of the myth of the Dark Continent--Europe's idea of Africa, in all its darkness and its horror. Let me give some idea of the supple readings that culminate in a refreshing insistence that we \"see\" (to use Conrad's word from his Preface to The Nigger of the Narcissus) the dreadful ambiguities of Heart of Darkness, a text which resists uniform interpretation as exposure of atrocities in the Congo or as ephemeral impressionism. Perhaps the most significant imperative of Rule of Darkness is that we put aside a narrow definition of imperialism as the late nineteenth-century acquisition of new territories by European nations. Brantlinger insists that early and mid-Victorians expressed imperialist ideology in their writings and that imperialism \"understood as an evolving but pervasive set of attitudes and ideas toward the rest of the world, influenced all aspects of Victorian and Edwardian culture\" (8). But this set of attitudes and ideas undergoes profound change throughout the century, as he demonstrates in his analysis of a shift from hopeful evangelical reform of the savage \"other\" to a sense of decay, decadence, and loss about the \"improving\" enterprise at the end of the century. In-between (among other things), Brantlinger shows that Frederick Marryat's tales set the pattern for \"the imperialist adventure fiction that flourished from the seafaring writers who emulated him in the 1830s ... down to Haggard, Stevenson, Kipling, and Conrad\" (49), and that the literature of Botany Bay expresses contradictions characterizing \"the entire literature of emigration and colonization. Were emigrants themselves outcasts, social misfits, criminals? If so, how could they be viewed as the vanguard of an Empire whose goal was nothing less than semidivine, the redemption of the nonwestern world from darkness and barbarism\" (113). The posing of this question exemplifies what is particularly good about Brantlinger's study, his identification and sustained elaboration of the deep contradictions embedded in all imperialist discourse. What's also especially fine about Rule of Darkness is the level-headed use of Foucault's theories of power and surveillance. Unlike many critics who spin disciplinary designs at the drop of a narrative hat, Brantlinger, in his readings of Philip Meadows Taylor's Confession of a Thug (1839) and of Sir Richard Button's Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah (1855) produces persuasive evidence that knowledge is power, that the panoptic revelation of Indian Thuggee by the Anglo-Indian police and the anthropological surveillance of western science, produce and reproduce imperial domination. …","PeriodicalId":39582,"journal":{"name":"Nineteenth Century Prose","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1989-12-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Patrick Brantlinger, Rule of Darkness: British Literature and Imperialism, 1830-1914\",\"authors\":\"D. 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From Marryat's maritime tales of the 1830s through Thackeray's India, the literature of Botany Bay, and Orientalist fantasies of the latter quarter of the century, we arrive at Brantlinger's stunning genealogical chart of the myth of the Dark Continent--Europe's idea of Africa, in all its darkness and its horror. Let me give some idea of the supple readings that culminate in a refreshing insistence that we \\\"see\\\" (to use Conrad's word from his Preface to The Nigger of the Narcissus) the dreadful ambiguities of Heart of Darkness, a text which resists uniform interpretation as exposure of atrocities in the Congo or as ephemeral impressionism. Perhaps the most significant imperative of Rule of Darkness is that we put aside a narrow definition of imperialism as the late nineteenth-century acquisition of new territories by European nations. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

帕特里克·布兰特林格:《黑暗的统治:英国文学与帝国主义,1830-1914》。伊萨卡,纽约州:康奈尔大学,1988年。在新历史主义有时是非历史主义的时代,在文化唯物主义往往与文学分析无关的时代,这是一本多么精彩的书。布兰特林格的研究立足于对社会历史的大量阅读,以及对维多利亚文学无与伦比的熟悉,是文化研究最好、最富有成效的例证。他开始描绘帝国主义意识形态的发展,主要是在冒险故事、旅行叙事、小说和历史中,他表明,帝国主义的话语是19世纪帝国扩张的一个至关重要的促成因素。从马里亚特19世纪30年代的海上故事,到萨克雷的《印度》,到植物学湾的文学作品,再到20世纪后25年的东方学幻想,我们来到了布兰特林格令人惊叹的黑暗大陆神话谱系图——欧洲对非洲的看法,充满了黑暗和恐怖。让我来给一些灵活的阅读的想法,在一个令人耳目一新的坚持中达到高潮,我们“看到”(用康拉德在他的《那喀索斯的黑鬼》序言中的话说)《黑暗的心》可怕的模棱两可,这篇文章拒绝将其统一解释为揭露刚果的暴行或短暂的印象主义。也许《黑暗的统治》最重要的命令是,我们抛开了帝国主义的狭隘定义,即19世纪晚期欧洲国家对新领土的占领。布兰特林格坚持认为,维多利亚早期和中期的人在他们的作品中表达了帝国主义的意识形态,帝国主义“被理解为一种不断发展但普遍存在的对世界其他地区的态度和思想,影响了维多利亚和爱德华时代文化的各个方面”(8)。但是,这一套态度和思想在整个世纪都经历了深刻的变化,正如他在分析中所展示的那样,从对野蛮的“他者”的充满希望的福音改革转变为一种腐朽、颓废的感觉。以及本世纪末“改善”企业的损失。在这两者之间,布兰特林格指出,弗雷德里克·马里亚特的故事为“19世纪30年代模仿他的航海作家们蓬勃发展起来的帝国主义冒险小说树立了模式……直到哈格德、史蒂文森、吉卜林和康拉德”(49),植物学湾的文学表达了“整个移民和殖民文学”的矛盾特征。移民本身是被社会抛弃、与社会格格不入还是罪犯?如果是这样,他们怎么能被视为一个帝国的先锋,这个帝国的目标不亚于半神性,将非西方世界从黑暗和野蛮中拯救出来”(113)。这个问题的提出体现了布兰特林格的研究的特别之处,他对所有帝国主义话语中隐含的深层矛盾的识别和持续阐述。《黑暗法则》的另一个优点是,它冷静地运用了福柯关于权力和监视的理论。不像许多评论家,他们在叙述的时候就会编造出纪律设计,布兰特林格在阅读菲利普·梅多斯·泰勒的《一个暴徒的自白》(1839)和理查德·巴顿爵士的《麦地那和麦加朝圣的个人叙述》(1855)时,提出了有说服力的证据,证明知识就是力量,英印警察对印度暴徒的全面揭露和西方科学的人类学监视,产生并复制了帝国统治。…
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Patrick Brantlinger, Rule of Darkness: British Literature and Imperialism, 1830-1914
Patrick Brantlinger, Rule of Darkness: British Literature and Imperialism, 1830-1914. Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1988. At a time when new historicism is sometimes ahistoricism, when cultural materialism is often unrelated to literary analysis, what a splendid book this is to have. Firmly grounded in ample readings in social history and everywhere informed by a matchless familiarity with Victorian literature, Brantlinger's study exemplifies cultural studies at its best and most productive. Setting out to map the development of imperialist ideology, primarily in adventure tales, travel narratives, novels, and histories, he shows that the discourse of imperialism is a vital enabling factor in the expansion of empire in the nineteenth century. From Marryat's maritime tales of the 1830s through Thackeray's India, the literature of Botany Bay, and Orientalist fantasies of the latter quarter of the century, we arrive at Brantlinger's stunning genealogical chart of the myth of the Dark Continent--Europe's idea of Africa, in all its darkness and its horror. Let me give some idea of the supple readings that culminate in a refreshing insistence that we "see" (to use Conrad's word from his Preface to The Nigger of the Narcissus) the dreadful ambiguities of Heart of Darkness, a text which resists uniform interpretation as exposure of atrocities in the Congo or as ephemeral impressionism. Perhaps the most significant imperative of Rule of Darkness is that we put aside a narrow definition of imperialism as the late nineteenth-century acquisition of new territories by European nations. Brantlinger insists that early and mid-Victorians expressed imperialist ideology in their writings and that imperialism "understood as an evolving but pervasive set of attitudes and ideas toward the rest of the world, influenced all aspects of Victorian and Edwardian culture" (8). But this set of attitudes and ideas undergoes profound change throughout the century, as he demonstrates in his analysis of a shift from hopeful evangelical reform of the savage "other" to a sense of decay, decadence, and loss about the "improving" enterprise at the end of the century. In-between (among other things), Brantlinger shows that Frederick Marryat's tales set the pattern for "the imperialist adventure fiction that flourished from the seafaring writers who emulated him in the 1830s ... down to Haggard, Stevenson, Kipling, and Conrad" (49), and that the literature of Botany Bay expresses contradictions characterizing "the entire literature of emigration and colonization. Were emigrants themselves outcasts, social misfits, criminals? If so, how could they be viewed as the vanguard of an Empire whose goal was nothing less than semidivine, the redemption of the nonwestern world from darkness and barbarism" (113). The posing of this question exemplifies what is particularly good about Brantlinger's study, his identification and sustained elaboration of the deep contradictions embedded in all imperialist discourse. What's also especially fine about Rule of Darkness is the level-headed use of Foucault's theories of power and surveillance. Unlike many critics who spin disciplinary designs at the drop of a narrative hat, Brantlinger, in his readings of Philip Meadows Taylor's Confession of a Thug (1839) and of Sir Richard Button's Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah (1855) produces persuasive evidence that knowledge is power, that the panoptic revelation of Indian Thuggee by the Anglo-Indian police and the anthropological surveillance of western science, produce and reproduce imperial domination. …
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Nineteenth Century Prose
Nineteenth Century Prose Arts and Humanities-Arts and Humanities (all)
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期刊介绍: "Nineteenth-Century Prose" invites submissions for a special issue on the picturesque for Fall 2002. The picturesque is, arguably, the most pervasive and familiar aesthetic term of the nineteenth century, as well as its most controversial. It demarcates the limits of nineteenth century sympathy and designates the terms of cosmopolitan, national and regional inclusion.
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The Limits of Metaphor in Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals What's the Use of Reading Emerson Pragmatically? the Example of William James Periodical Literature in Nineteenth-Century America Patrick Brantlinger, Rule of Darkness: British Literature and Imperialism, 1830-1914 Ludmilla Jordanova, Sexual Visions: Images of Gender in Science and Medicine between the Eighteenth and Twentieth Centuries
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