中大機構典藏-NCU Institutional Repository-提供博碩士論文、考古題、期刊論文、研究計畫等下載:Item 987654321/47801
English  |  正體中文  |  简体中文  |  Items with full text/Total items : 78937/78937 (100%)
Visitors : 39423765      Online Users : 590
RC Version 7.0 © Powered By DSPACE, MIT. Enhanced by NTU Library IR team.
Scope Tips:
  • please add "double quotation mark" for query phrases to get precise results
  • please goto advance search for comprehansive author search
  • Adv. Search
    HomeLoginUploadHelpAboutAdminister Goto mobile version


    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.lib.ncu.edu.tw/handle/987654321/47801


    Title: 19世紀美國文本中的錯認及形象危機;Misrecognition and the Crisis of Publicity in Three Nineteenth Century American Texts
    Authors: 詹悅湘;Yueh-hsiang Chan
    Contributors: 英美語文學研究所
    Keywords: 形象;錯認;十九世紀美國;misrecognition;nineteenth century America;publicity
    Date: 2011-07-25
    Issue Date: 2012-01-05 14:04:48 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: 社會禮俗長久以來一直被視作社會規範的一個重要形式;此外,社會禮俗也扮演了確保社會階層以及界線的穩定。然而,美國的社會禮俗自從其取得獨立後便急遽改變,社會地位也因此不再固定不變而「錯認」也在此情況下在社會上造成恐慌。 本論文探討四份美國文學著作中的錯認議題,從探討華盛頓歐文的《李伯大夢》(Rip van Winkle)開始審視美國獨立後的錯認引發的社會危機,再來將會檢視艾倫坡的《莫格爾街凶殺案》(The Murders in the Rue Morgue),在這篇故事中的目擊證人都將實際上是隻猩猩的凶手所發出的聲音誤認為是和自己不同國籍的外國人。在《莫格爾街凶殺案》後將會探討亨利詹姆士的《黛斯密勒》(Daisy Miller)中黛絲拒絕沃克太太一個淑女應該坐馬車出門而非走路的建議時所引發的對立緊張的場景。最後我將探討史蒂芬克萊恩的《怪物》(The Monster)中的亨利強森(Henry Johnson)在周五傍晚穿著色彩搶眼的衣著走在大街上使旁人無法辨認其身分時所造成的恐慌。 People have long valued social norms because they are a means of social control. In addition, social norms stabilize social hierarchy and bulwarks social boundaries. However, social norms changed drastically in the United States since it transformed into a self-governing urbanized country. Social positions, therefore, ceased to be fixed and transparent as before, and misrecognition caused anxiety in this scenario. I will investigate crisis of misrecognition in four American texts in this thesis. The thesis begins with Washington Irving’s “Rip van Winkle” (1819) to pose the apprehension that misrecognition generated after America’s independence. I will then examine three scenes from three different nineteenth-century narratives in which a protagonist is publicly misrecognized, much the way Rip van Winkle is. I will argue in each case that this act of misrecognition expresses continuing anxiety about democratic freedom in the United States, in particular when it involves the public conduct of the social group represented by the protagonist. The first scene I will examine occurs in Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” (1840) when witnesses who have overheard the murders of the two women all misidentify the killer, who turns out to be an “Orang-Outan,” as a foreigner based on the fact that they cannot understand the language it speaks. The second scene I will examine comes from Henry James’s Daisy Miller (1878) when Mrs. Walker insists that she rides in the carriage with her, rather than walk with the Italian, Mr. Giovanelli, suggesting that people who see her will think she is not respectable. The third scene I will examine occurs in Stephen Crane’s “The Monster” (1898) when Henry Johnson, Dr. Trescott’s black carriage hand, strolls down the main street looking to have a good time on a Friday evening only to cause an anxious debate among white male bystanders about who he is.
    Appears in Collections:[Graduate Program in English and American Language and Literature] Electronic Thesis & Dissertation

    Files in This Item:

    File Description SizeFormat
    index.html0KbHTML991View/Open


    All items in NCUIR are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved.

    社群 sharing

    ::: Copyright National Central University. | 國立中央大學圖書館版權所有 | 收藏本站 | 設為首頁 | 最佳瀏覽畫面: 1024*768 | 建站日期:8-24-2009 :::
    DSpace Software Copyright © 2002-2004  MIT &  Hewlett-Packard  /   Enhanced by   NTU Library IR team Copyright ©   - 隱私權政策聲明