簡易檢索 / 詳目顯示

研究生: 尚法諾
Robert Sean Farnon
論文名稱: 艾倫‧金斯堡〈嚎叫〉及〈卡第绪〉中 失敗的真摯性
Failed Authenticity in Allen Ginsberg's “Howl” and “Kaddish”
指導教授: 狄亞倫
Deveson, Aaron
口試委員: 曾思旭
Prystash, Justin
狄亞倫
Deveson, Aaron
Benjamin J. Heal
Benjamin J. Heal
口試日期: 2023/01/13
學位類別: 碩士
Master
系所名稱: 英語學系
Department of English
論文出版年: 2023
畢業學年度: 111
語文別: 英文
論文頁數: 74
中文關鍵詞: 真摯性閾限狀態艾倫‧金斯堡〈嚎叫〉猶太性〈卡第绪〉
英文關鍵詞: authenticity, liminality, Allen Ginsberg, “Howl”, Jewishness, “Kaddish”
研究方法: Primary Textual AnalysisSecondary textual Analysis
DOI URL: http://doi.org/10.6345/NTNU202300271
論文種類: 學術論文
相關次數: 點閱:89下載:15
分享至:
查詢本校圖書館目錄 查詢臺灣博碩士論文知識加值系統 勘誤回報
  • 摘要
    本論文探討金斯堡最著名的兩首詩的意義和文本經驗──這兩首詩在二十世紀美國文學生態中定義了他這一代人。如本論文所論,這些文本之所以有意義,在於它們表達了主張擁有真摯性卻失敗的後果,這種失敗部分源自於一種神話化形式的國族主義意識形態。我想闡明,金斯堡浩瀚的詩歌結構並不支持引起分裂的個體主義,而是將官方(白人新教)美國文化暴露在其自身邊界內產生的異質記憶和話語材料中。美國對真摯性的主流主張是基於一種物化的國族主義,被這種詩歌形式的暴露所破壞。
    第一章通過探討金斯堡的閾限狀態如何影響他在〈嚎叫〉中對美國的批評,以及國族主義的問題是如何透過將歐洲的猶太大屠殺意象與美國對自身麻煩的闡述並置來呈現的,從而探討了為什麼美國國族主義對金斯堡而言如此有問題。金斯堡的作品試圖通過收集美國歷史敘事中未被承認的聲音,並通過引起人們關注少數民族對美國生活的詮釋,來糾正和修正美國被認定存在的真摯性。
    在第二章中,我的焦點是金斯堡在其詩〈卡第绪〉中針對失敗的真摯性的詩歌形式清算,這裡的真摯性以更加私人的形式被感知到。透過心理健康評估和母親角色的脈絡,以及作為解構猶太人哀悼祈禱文的一部分,這些形式被問題化。背負著他母親的遺澤,金斯堡在〈卡第绪〉中比在〈嚎叫〉中更直接地處理了歷史上猶太教的正式儀式。在這篇後來的作品中,詩人調整了傳統宗教權威與他自己的精神真摯性之間的關係,這種方式提供了一種重構存在於世界的可能,但也承擔了在他自己的真摯性方面失敗的風險。

    Abstract
    This thesis explores the meanings and textual experiences of Ginsberg’s two most famous poems––poems that helped to define his generation in twentieth-century American literary culture. As this thesis argues, these texts are significant for the way they express the effects of a failed claim to authenticity arising in part from a mythologizing form of nationalistic ideology. I wish to show that instead of endorsing a divisive individualism, Ginsberg’s expansive poetic structures expose official (white Protestant) American culture to heterogeneous memory and discursive material arising within its own borders. This poetic mode of exposure undermines dominant American claims to authenticity based on a reifying nationalism.
    Chapter One looks at why American nationalism was so problematic for Ginsberg by exploring how Ginsberg’s liminality shapes his critique of America in “Howl,” and how the issues of nationalism are presented through juxtaposing Shoah imageries from Europe with an American exposition of its own drama. Ginsberg’s work seeks to redress and revise the putative authenticity of America by gathering in unacknowledged voices from the American historical narrative and by drawing attention to minority expressions of American life.
    In Chapter Two my focus is on Ginsberg’s poetic reckoning with the failure of much more personal forms of perceived authenticity in his poem “Kaddish.” These forms are problematized through the contexts of mental health evaluation and the role of motherhood and as part of a deconstruction of the Jewish prayer of mourning. Carrying the weight of his mother’s legacy, Ginsberg approaches historical Judaism’s formal rituals more directly in “Kaddish” than in “Howl.” In this later work, the poet reconfigures relations between traditional religious authority and his own spiritual authenticity in a way that holds out the possibility of a reconstitutive way of being in the world but which also risks failure in terms of his own authenticity.

    Table of Contents Introduction Ginsberg, and the Beats 1 Authenticity and the Beats 6 Ginsberg and Authenticity 14 General Aims 19 Chapter One Claims to Authenticity: “Howl” and America 21 The Shoah in America: Liminal Authenticity 29 [H]ydrogen jukebox”: Explosive Dissonance 37 Chapter Two Ginsberg’s Naomi: Claims to Authenticity 42 Ginsberg’s Deconstructed “Kaddish” 51 Dissolution of the Ideal 56 Conclusion 68 Works Cited 71

    Axelrod, Steven Gould, Camille Roman and Thomas Travisano.“Allen Ginsberg,”The New Anthology of American Poetry: Vol III: Postmodernisms 1950-Present, Rutgers UP, 2012.
    Breslin, James.“Allen Ginsberg: The Origins of ‘Howl’ and ‘Kaddish’.”The Iowa Review,vol. 8, no. 2,, 1977, pp. 82-108, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/20158746.
    Cantor, Harold.“Allen Ginsberg's‘Kaddish’: A Poem of Exorcism,” Studies in American Jewish Literature, vol. 2, no. 2, 1976, pp. 10-26, www.jstor.org/stable/41206227.
    Charters, Ann. Editor. The Portable Beat Reader, Viking Penguin, 1992.
    Cheever, Abigail. Real Phonies: Cultures of Authenticity in Post World War II America,University of Georgia Press, 2010.
    Elkholy, Sharin N. The Philosophy of the Beats, UP of Kentucky, 2012, Project Muse, muse.jhu.edu/book/13652.
    Fazzino, Jimmy. World Beats, Dartmouth College Press, 2016, Project Muse, muse.jhu.edu/book/64138.
    Finlay, W. M. L. “Pathologizing Dissent: Identity Politics, Zionism and the‘Self-Hating Jew’,”British Journal of Social Psychology. vol. 44. The British Psychological Society, 2005, pp. 201-22, www.bpsjournals.co.uk.
    Gair, Christopher. The Beat Generation, Oneworld Publications, 2008.
    Ginsberg, Allen. Collected Poems 1947-1997, Harper Collins, 2006.
    –––, Deliberate Prose: Selected Essays 1952-1995, Edited by Bill Morgan. Harper Collins, 2000.
    –––, Spontaneous Mind: Selected Interviews 1958-1996, Edited by David Carter, Harper Collins, 2001.
    Golomb, Jacob. In Search of Authenticity: From Kierkegaard to Camus, Routledge, 1995.
    Herring, Scott. “‘Her Brothers Dead in Riverside or Russia’: ‘Kaddish’ and the Holocaust”,Contemporary Literature, UP Wisconsin, vol. 42, no. 3,, 2001,.pp. 535-556, JSTOR,.www.jstor.org/stable/1208995.
    Higham, John. “Social Discrimination Against Jews in America, 1830-1930,” Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society, JHUP, vol. 47, no. 1, September, 1957, pp. 1-33, www.jstor.org/stable/43059004.
    Kamenetz, Rodger. The Jew in the Lotus, Harper Collins, 2007.
    —-. Foreword. On Judaism, By Martin Buber, Schocken Books, 1995, pp. xii-xxiii.
    Kraut, Benny. “The Dissent of American Judaism from American Religion”. Shofar. vol. 7, no. 2, Purdue UP, 1989, pp. 1-12. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/42941280.
    Laceulle, Hanne. Aging and Self-Realization: Cultural Narratives about Later Life, Transcript Verlag, 2018, www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv8d5tp1.10.
    MacDonald. David B., Identity Politics in the Age of Genocide; The Holocaust and Historical Representation, Routledge, 2008.
    Martinez, M. L. Countering the Counterculture - Rereading Postwar American Dissent, UP Wisconsin, 2003.
    McLoughlin, Kate. “Dead Prayer?: The Liturgical and Literary Kaddish”. Studies in American Jewish Literature. vol. 25, Contemporary Jewish American Writers Respond to Judaism, Penn State UP, 2006, pp. 4-25. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/41206046.
    Miles, Barry. Allen Ginsberg: Beat Poet, Virgin Books, 2010.
    Mortenson, Erik. Capturing the Beat Moment: Cultural Politics and the Poetics of Presence, Southern Illinois UP, 2011. Project Muse, muse.jhu.edu/book/1455.
    Ostriker, Alicia. and Allen Ginsberg. “‘Howl’ Revisited: The Poet as Jew”. The American Poetry Review. vol. 26, no.4, Old City Publishing, 1997, pp. 28-31. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/27782471.
    Ravits, Martha A. “The Jewish Mother: Comedy and Controversy in American Popular Culture,” OUP, vol. 25, no. 1, 2000, pp. 3-31, www.jstor.org/stable/468149.
    Reynolds, Lori. “‘The Mad Ones’ and the ‘Geeks’: Cognitive and Physical Disability in the Writing of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg,” Journal of Literary & Cultural Studies, Liverpool UP, vol. 9, no. 2, 2015, pp. 153-169.
    Riesman, David. “A Philosophy for ‘Minority’ Living: The Jewish Situation and the ‘Nerve of Failure’,” Commentary, American Jewish Committee, vol. 6, 1948, pp. 413-422.
    Schoeps, Julius H. Pioneers of Zionism: Hess, Pinkser, Rülf, De Gruyter, 2013.
    Scholem, Gersholm. The Allen Ginsberg Project, 5 December 2017, allenginsberg.org
    Schumacher, Michael. Dharma Lion: A Biography of Allen Ginsberg, University of Minnesota Press, 2016.
    Sexton, Jared Yates. American Rule: How a Nation Conquered the World but Failed its People, Penguin Random House, 2020.
    The New King James Bible, Harper Collins, 1982.
    Trigilio, Tony. “‘Strange Prophecies Anew’: Rethinking the Politics of Matter and Spirit in Ginsberg’s ‘Kaddish’,” American Literature, vol. 71, no. 4, 1999, pp. 773-795. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2902632.
    Wallace, Patricia and David Kalstone. The Norton Anthology of American Literature, W. W. Norton & Company, 2003, pp.2609-21.
    Whitfield, Stephen J. In Search of American Jewish Culture, Brandeis UP, 1999.
    Whitlock. Flint, Buchenwald––hell on a hilltop: Murder,Torture & Medical Experiments in the Nazis’Worst Concentration Camp, Cable Publishing, 2013.
    Williams, W. C. The Poetry Foundation, www.poetryfoundation.org.
    Young, Ralph. Dissent: The History of an American Idea, New York UP, 2015.

    下載圖示
    QR CODE