斯库达莫尔历险记,“丘比特人”

Q1 Arts and Humanities Spenser Studies Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1086/717090
Judith H. Anderson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

斯库达穆尔,作为丘比特的人,在这一提名的所有模棱两可的复杂性中,是一个比他通常看起来更关键的人物。作为丘比特之爱的特定男性代表,他的形象和命运在斯宾塞史诗浪漫主义中占有重要的主题地位。但斯库达穆尔的形象也吸引着各种各样的双重性,讽刺,模棱两可和反常,这些特征最终和爱情一样成为他形象的一部分。在很大程度上,整个探索性的,形式上实验性的第四册回答了类似的特征。当其他人的爱情故事在这本书中达到了一个快乐的平台时,斯库达莫的爱情故事给自己带来了无尽的问题。斯库达穆尔在《维纳斯神庙》中的高潮作为对第四卷中任何实现承诺的挑战,并在这本书的性爱和性别核心中断言了典型的斯宾塞式意义的复杂性。斯库达穆尔关于神庙的故事是双重性的高潮,丘比特的男人似乎无法动摇,就像他的形象在第四卷中开始改善,然后在他的故事中回到他职业生涯的开始,绑架阿莫雷特,从而在他的叙述中引入了一种暂时的双重性——这种双重性以阿莫雷特的明显缺席为标志。这种双重性在故事结尾对俄耳甫斯的召唤中继续存在。
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The Adventures of Scudamour, “Cupids Man”
Scudamour, as Cupid’s man, in all the ambiguous complexity of this nomination, is a more crucial figure than he has often looked. As the specified male representative of Cupidean Love, his figure and fate could hardly be of greater thematic importance in Spenser’s epic romance. But Scudamour’s figure is also a magnet for doubleness of various sorts, for irony, ambiguity, and anomaly, and these characteristics are finally as much a part of his figuration as Love is. To a great extent, the whole of the exploratory, formally experimental Book IV answers to similar characteristics. While others’ love stories reach a happy plateau in this book, that of Scudamour accrues endless questions to itself. Scudamour’s culminating exploit in the Temple of Venus serves as a challenge to any promise of fulfillment in Book IV and asserts a typically Spenserian complexity of meaning at the erotic, gendered heart of this book. Scudamour’s tale of the Temple is the culminating instance of the doubleness that Cupid’s man cannot seem to shake, much as his figure starts to improve in Book IV before he returns in his tale to the outset of his career, the abduction of Amoret, and thereby introduces a temporal doubleness into his narrative—a doubleness marked by the conspicuous absence of Amoret. This doubleness continues in the evocation of Orpheus at his tale’s end.
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Spenser Studies
Spenser Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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Front Matter “Soveraigne place”: Spenser with Henri Lefebvre Thinking through Symbionts: Spenser with Donna Haraway On Dissonance and Late Style: Spenser with Theodor W. Adorno In the Person of the Author: A Response to “Imagined Companions”
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