机构:
Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Med Educ Bioeth & Med Humanities, Evanston, IL 60208 USANorthwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Med Educ Bioeth & Med Humanities, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
Belling, Catherine
[1
]
机构:
[1] Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Med Educ Bioeth & Med Humanities, Evanston, IL 60208 USA
horror;
trauma;
posttraumatic fiction;
Nanking Massacre;
Mo Hayder;
D O I:
10.1215/00138282-9277271
中图分类号:
I [文学];
学科分类号:
05 ;
摘要:
The ambivalent attraction of feeling horror might explain someparadoxes regarding the consumption of representations of atrocities committed in the real world, in the past, on actual other people. How do horror fictions work in the transmission or exploitation of historical trauma? How might they function as prosthetic memories, at once disturbing and informative to readers who might otherwise not be exposed to those histories at all? What are the ethical implications of horror elicited by fictional representations of historical suffering? This article engages these questions through the reading of Mo Hayder's 2004 novel The Devil of Nanking. Hayder exploits horror's appeal and also-by foregrounding the acts of representation, reading, and spectatorship that generate this response-opens that process to critique. The novel may productively be understood as a work of posttraumatic fiction, both containing and exposing the concentric layers of our representational engagement with records of past atrocity. Through such a reading, a spherical rather than linear topology emerges for history itself, a structure of haunted and embodied consumption.
机构:
Media Design Sch, Art & Design Programme, Auckland, New Zealand
Media Design Sch, 10 Madden St, Auckland 1010, New ZealandMedia Design Sch, Art & Design Programme, Auckland, New Zealand