Battle for the Bildungsroman: ‘protagonicity’ and national allegory

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 1955-1968
Author(s):  
Michael Ormsbee
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengcheng You

This article reviews four major Chinese animated adaptations based on the classic Journey to the West. It shows how these adaptations, spanning four historical phases of modern China, encapsulate changes in Chinese national identity. Close readings underpin a developmental narrative about how Chinese animated adaptations of this canonical text strive to negotiate the multimodal expressions of homegrown folklore traditions, technical influences of western animation, and domestic political situations across time. This process has identified aesthetic dilemmas around adaptations that oscillate between national allegory and individual destiny, verisimilitude and the fantastic quest for meaning. In particular, the subjectivisation of Monkey King on the screen, embodying the transition from primitivistic impulse, youthful idealism and mature practicality up to responsible stewardship, presents how an iconic national figure encapsulates the real historical time of China.


Imbizo ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adetunji Kazeem Adebiyi-Adelabu

Sello Duiker’s The Quiet Violence of Dreams offers an extensive treatment of homosexuality, a preoccupation which, until recently, is rare in black African fiction. On this account, as well as its depth and openness, the work has attracted some critical attention. It has been read from a masculinity perspective, as a coming-out novel, as a national allegory, as a work that challenges the notion of fixed sexuality, as a work that normalises same-sex sexuality, and so forth. Unlike these studies, this article examines the representation and disquisition around same-sex preference in the novel, with a view to demonstrating how some myths about homosexuality are exploded in the groundbreaking work, and showing that the narrative could also be apprehended as intellectual advocacy for the right to same-sex orientation.


Author(s):  
Patrick Dove

Chapter 5 challenges the automatic association between deconstruction and the work of Derrida by turning to the critical legacy of Paul de Man in Latin American literary studies. Dove evaluates Roberto Bolaño’s posthumous opus magnum through competing theoretical accounts of allegory taken from Paul de Man and Fredric Jameson. Bolaño’s novel both alludes to a Jamesonian notion of “national allegory” and performs its exhaustion in the time of neoliberal-administered globalization. In that light, Dove asks what the accounts of allegory found in de Man might still have to say to us today: Can de Man’s account of allegory as narrative postulation or performance of a radical anteriority help to understand how Bolaño’s novel shapes an idea of time that serves as an alternative to modern conceptualizations of historical time?


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document