《一个士兵的拥抱》英语论文.doc
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1、1. Introduction Nadine Gordimer is a white author who lives in the country of South Africa. She is known for her excellent characters and the vivid details of her books. Her stories are written in the context of her South African experiences. She also writes about the previous challenges South Afric
2、a met under apartheid, at a time when society was split by race. She has written a large number of novels, Gordimers subject matters have been the effect of apartheid on the lives of South Africans and the moral and psychological tensions of life in a racially-divided country, which she often wrote
3、about by focusing on oppressed non-white characters. Gordimer explains many aspects of this problem in South Africa with her A Soldiers Embrace. Many writers and critics in China have done some research on Gordimer. Critics applaud Gordimers authentic portrayals of South African experience, and beli
4、eve that her fiction has given the world an understanding of the horrible racism in her country.Hu Zhongqing argued“Gordimer reveals fully subconsciousness in the depth of black peoples heart and oppressive metamorphic desire, which makes reader detect black in straitened circumstances under aparthe
5、id system”(Hu, 2007:177). Qu Shijing has divided Gordimers writings into two sections and made the conclusion that“ Gordimers outlook on arts is also her political perspective and outlook on life”(Qu,1998:156-160). Critics abroad are more than those in China. Gordimers orientation toward a non-racia
6、l or hybrid culture specific to South Africa is often admired. Stephen Clingman is the most typical representative in this respect. In his view,“Gordimer is firmly part of developing non-racial culture in South Africa”(Clingman,1993:xxxiv). And “at its broadest her struggle as a novelist lies in pro
7、gressing towards a new, integrated South African culture of the future”(Clingman,1993:4). In more radical views, Kathrin Wagner criticizes Gordimer as dealing with“the issue of post-colonial reality” but remaining“in essence enmeshed and entrapped in some archetypal colonialist paradigms in her deep
8、est psyche”(Wagner,1994:4). Her recurrent themes are not to reinforce but to deconstruct the categories of the apartheid dichotomy and unmask the ideology underlying it. Nadine Gordimer began to write at nine. At the age of thirteen, Gordimers first short story was published in the Liberal Johannesb
9、urg Magazine, Forum. From then on, her life has been devoted to her writing. She has never been opposing something intentionally; she wrote novels out of curiosity to life, expecting to explain what life and humanity are. However, born in a racially-divided country, this is what she feels familiar.
10、While many black writers were busying engaging national liberal revolution, and kept silent in literature. Gordimer insisted on the combination of public concerns and literary creation. She never gives up her deep concern for the fate of South Africa . The racially-divided system in South Africa wen
11、t against the public concern that everyone is equal. The system openly drew up law and put it into effect to deprive basic human rights of black people. During the time of being oppressed, the aboriginals in South Africa were continuously pushed to edge, and to be “other, losing basic human rights.
12、To overthrow the unequal treatment, black fighters persisted in fighting against white for a long time. Under the strong force from domestic and overseas, finally, black succeeded in regaining freedom. A Soldiers Embrace portrayed a white couple who sympathized and helped freedom fighters, when they
13、 celebrated revolutionary triumph; it reflected the relationship between black and themselves, and the relationship between revolution and themselves. The couples excited and happy emotion changed into sad and dreary of having to reflect themselves. The couple, for a short while, was unable to treat
14、 exactly black leaders after they obtained power. In the end, they had to leave their twenty one-year -old house. Throughout A Soldiers Embrace, Gordimer develops the theme of mans inhumanity to man through the political system in South Africa. Chapter2Though far from adequate, this part makes a sym
15、ptomatic reading of postcolonialism out of A Soldiers Embrace and this part also employs terminology of postcolonial theory for analysis. Often, the term postcolonialism is taken literally, to mean the period of time after colonialism. Griffiths regard postcolonialism itself as“a specific discourse
16、which nevertheless has neither a specific object nor definable set of non-discursive features; it is, at any given point, what it says it is. ”(Griffiths, 1989:154).In other words, it is important to accept the plural nature of the word postcolonialism, as it does not simply refer to the period afte
17、r the colonial era. By some definitions, postcolonialism can also be seen as“a continuation of colonialism, albeit through different or new relationships concerning power and the control/production of knowledge”(Sharp, J. 2008,230). What, then, is postcolonial theory?The emergence of postcolonial th
18、eory since the late 1980s signifies the dissolution of certain limited pedagogical objects such as Third World Literature, Colonial Discourse, New Literatures in English, even Comparative Literature in the strict sense and their reconstitution under the signs of cultural and philosophical postmodern
19、ities. This involves extending the meaning of postcolonialism to include any and all structures of power and domination, while, in another direction, also dissolving the difference between procedures of literary study and methodologies of historical study. (Said, 1993:124). Homi Bhabha is an influen
20、tial postcolonial critic, and the theory that is central to Bhabhas discourse on postcolonialism is that of hybridity, which“presents itself as a critique of essentialism, partakes of a carnivalesque collapse and play of identities, and comes under a great many names”(Bhabha,1994:64). Another import
21、ant theory is identity which means individualism and distinctive, it is decided by difference of culture Therefore, identity is” an unstable effect of relations which define identities by marking differences” (Hall, 1996:89). Identity marks our way in the world and provides a way of understanding th
22、e interplay between our subjective experience of the world and the cultural and historical construction of our subjectivity. In this part, these aspects of postcolonial theory and writers will be referred to in the examination of context of postcolonialsim in A Soldiers Embrace. 2.1 Hybridity embodi
23、ed in A Soldiers EmbraceThe first piece opens on a celebration of freedom. The blacks in this South African country have just won the right to govern themselves. They are dancing in the street, together with the white colonial soldiers who only yesterday were their enemies. As Nelson Mandela, who ha
24、d been kept in prison for twenty seven years because of participating in antiapartheid movement, said “one who is oppressed others and one who being oppressed both are supposed to gain liberation. It is hatred that drives people to despoil others liberty”(Mandela ,1978:153).The fighters are too exci
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