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MELVILLE'S INLAND IMAGINATION: IDEALISM AND THE UNCONSCIOUS IN 'REDBURN' AND 'PIERRE'.

机译:梅尔维尔的内陆想像力:“重烧”和“皮埃尔”中的理想主义和默默无闻。

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摘要

Redburn and Pierre represent a diptych of Melville's development from a writer of psychological subtilty to one whose psycho-analytical concern proves strikingly modern, even as it specifically addresses key literary and philosophical questions of mid-nineteenth century America. Drawing upon his own earliest adventures for Redburn, Melville seems himself drawn into still earlier dreams and desires which transform the straitened prospects of a "boy" in the merchant service into a filial quest. This psycho-analytical pursuit introduces a new principle of narration to Melville's fiction. He creates a history as interesting for its elipses and omissions as for those images and impulses which are readily recalled. Redburn self-consciously tells one story about how his predilection for "roving" emerged early and grew consistently, but the domestic traumas which are largely circumvented in this self-conscious pattern form another, unconscious design.;Redburn and Pierre aspire to be only children--in both senses. First, their inflated ambitions seem to project an essentially childish solipsism, as in Redburn's desire to recover the old world of paternal authority and maternal regard or in Pierre's desire to redeem the childhood ideals which once seem substantiated in Saddle Meadows. Secondly, this unweaned self-absorption proves not only selective but ultimately exclusive, so that each climactically fails in his responsibilities as a "brother." Instead, Redburn and Pierre remain fixated by an infant faith which conceives identity in terms of a father-ideal that has been somehow betrayed in the flesh--in the father's material or moral bankruptcy and in the physical or sensual hunger to which they suddenly discover themselves heir.;In their endeavors to relocate themselves within or reincarnate themselves as this ideal, both these embattled sons adopt postures which Melville found popularized in contemporary American literature and in which he seemed to discern an analogous regression. Redburn's quest for the father's lost world focuses upon England in much the same way that Irving locates the germ of the Sketch Book in his earliest dreams of England as that "land of Promise" which must substantiate everything "childhood has heard." Similarly, Pierre's conception of himself as a "heaven-begotten Christ," in response to what he imagines to be his father's mortal failing, draws, upon the transcendental idealism and rhetoric of Emerson, literalizing "Nature"'s proclamation that "Infancy is the messiah.".;Redburn, in his return to the Old World, will try to mystify it as sacred history and therein recover the former, idealized authority of his father. Pierre, embarking upon a transcendent Duty, will try to mystify himself in a "heaven-begotten" identity and thereby redeem the former, idealized character of his father. Together, Redburn and Pierre embody a unique approach to the question of "self" and the direction of man's deepest nature. Melville defines this direction as psycho-analytical, probing the free reign of self-conscious intentions for the closed circuit of unconscious design.;Only in Pierre does Melville again create a virtual psychobiography--this time much more deliberately. The progress of the psychological anatomy is no longer a subtle undercurrent but the tide itself by which Pierre is so cruelly buffeted. Melville practices what, by conventional expectations, seems a narrative abandon, but which represents the passionate resolve to trace man's irrational motives beyond the progressive fiction(s) of linear form. Whereas in Redburn the ambiguities emerge indirectly through the gap in self-knowledge between the narrator and his personal narrative, in Pierre the ambiguities arise precisely from the narrator's close scrutiny of his narration, whereby "I am more frank with Pierre than the best men are with themselves.".
机译:雷德本和皮埃尔代表了梅尔维尔从一位心理微妙的作家到一位其心理分析关注被证明具有惊人现代性的人,尽管它专门解决了19世纪中叶美国的主要文学和哲学问题。梅尔维尔(Melville)凭借自己最早的雷德本(Redburn)冒险经历,似乎陷入了更早的梦想和愿望,将梦boy以求的“男孩”在商人服务行业中变成了孝顺的追求。这种心理分析的追求为梅尔维尔的小说引入了叙事的新原理。他的历史因其省略和遗漏以及易于回忆的图像和冲动而有趣。雷德本自觉地讲述了一个关于他对“巡回”的偏爱如何早日出现并持续增长的故事,但是在这种自觉模式中被规避的家庭创伤形成了另一种无意识的设计。雷德本和皮埃尔渴望成为独生子。 -两种意义上。首先,他们的雄心勃勃的野心似乎预示着一种幼稚的唯心主义,例如雷德本(Redburn)希望恢复父权和母爱的旧世界,或者皮埃尔(Pierre)想要挽回曾经在马鞍草甸(Saddle Meadows)中得到证实的童年理想。其次,这种无节制的自我吸收不仅证明是选择性的,而且最终证明是排他性的,因此每个人在气候上都丧失了作为“兄弟”的责任。取而代之的是,雷德本和皮埃尔仍然被婴儿期的信仰所迷住,婴儿期的信仰以一种父亲理想的身份被认同,而父亲理想在某种程度上已经被背叛了-父亲的物质或道德破产以及他们突然发现的肉体或肉欲上的饥饿为了实现自己的理想,他们努力将自己重新安置或转世,这些四面楚歌的儿子都采取了梅尔维尔发现的姿势,这些姿势在当代美国文学中很普遍,而且他似乎可以看出类似的回归。雷德本对父亲失落的世界的追求集中在英格兰,就像欧文在他最早的英格兰梦中找到素描本的源头一样,就是“无极之地”,它必须证实“童年所听到的一切”。同样,皮埃尔将自己想象成“天生的基督”,作为他父亲的致命失败的回应,借鉴了爱默生的先验唯心主义和修辞,将“自然”的宣告形容为“婴儿是弥赛亚。”;雷德本(Redburn)在重返旧世界时,将努力将其神秘化为神圣历史,并在其中恢复他父亲以前的理想化权威。皮埃尔(Pierre)承担了超越性的责任,将尝试以“天生的”身份神秘化自己,从而赎回其父亲以前的理想化品格。雷德本和皮埃尔在一起,对“自我”问题和人类最深处自然的方向提出了独特的态度。梅尔维尔(Melville)将这个方向定义为心理分析,探索无意识设计的封闭回路中自觉意图的自由统治。只有皮埃尔(Melville)再次创建虚拟的心理传记,这是故意的。心理解剖学的进展不再是微妙的暗流,而是皮埃尔如此残酷地受挫的潮流本身。梅尔维尔(Melville)按照传统的期望实践了似乎是叙事的放弃,但这代表了追寻超越线性形式的渐进式小说的人的非理性动机的热情决心。在雷德本中,歧义是通过叙述者与其个人叙事之间的自我认知的差距而间接出现的,而在皮埃尔,模棱两可正是源于叙述者对自己叙述的仔细审查,即“我对皮埃尔的坦率远胜于最优秀的人。与自己。”。

著录项

  • 作者

    SAUNDERS, BRIAN STEPHEN.;

  • 作者单位

    Cornell University.;

  • 授予单位 Cornell University.;
  • 学科 Literature American.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 1981
  • 页码 340 p.
  • 总页数 340
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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