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  1. 広島大学の刊行物
  2. 英語英文學研究
  3. 62巻

The Buried Giant におけるイシグロ文学の継承と発展

https://doi.org/10.15027/45941
https://doi.org/10.15027/45941
856c575f-ab53-45a4-a770-5024ee303b70
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
HiroshimaStud-EnglLangLit_62_45.pdf HiroshimaStud-EnglLangLit_62_45.pdf (365.3 KB)
Item type デフォルトアイテムタイプ_(フル)(1)
公開日 2023-03-18
タイトル
タイトル The Buried Giant におけるイシグロ文学の継承と発展
言語 ja
タイトル
タイトル The Buried Giant as Inheritance and Development of Kazuo Ishiguro’s Literary World
言語 en
作成者 池園, 宏

× 池園, 宏

ja 池園, 宏

en Ikezono, Hiroshi

Search repository
アクセス権
アクセス権 open access
アクセス権URI http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
権利情報
権利情報 著作権は、執筆者本人と広島大学英文学会に帰属する
主題
主題Scheme NDC
主題 930
内容記述
内容記述 On publication Kazuo Ishiguro’s latest work The Buried Giant (2015) evoked both public acclaim and criticism due to his unprecedented representation of fantastic elements. Recognizing his apparently drastic turn to fantasy, however, this paper intends to investigate how the new novel inherits and develops the literary traits which permeate the author’s previous works, focusing on its predecessor Never Let Me Go (2005) in particular. One of the most noteworthy plot features shared by BG and NLMG is the bizarre but significant “test of love" and the protagonists’ failure in passing it. In NLMG the clone couple Kathy and Tommy try in vain to demonstrate their mutual love in order to obtain a deferral of organ donation. In the closing scene of BG the old couple Axl and Beatrice are requested by a boatman to show their strong bond of love in order to sail to the enigmatic island together. The long-forgotten memory of their past discords, however, leads to their failure to share their voyage and consequently to their separation. Memory is an indispensable theme Ishiguro pursues in every work, but one highly innovative facet of development in BG is the unprecedented construction of the narrative world based upon the assumption of collective amnesia that spreads in society. This ultimately unique setting effectively contributes to individuals’ suffering from contradiction between love and memory; their natural interdependence is hampered by the hopeless impossibility of remembering love. In parallel with the death of Querig, the she-dragon whose breath has been erasing human memories, the unexpected disclosure of memories that should have remained hidden overshadows the old couple’s love, accelerating their final parting. In BG this private problem of disparity between love and memory is extended further to a more public level of society, nation, or tribe. Irrevocable disasters that actually occurred in tribal conflicts such as that of Bosnia or Kosovo, Ishiguro says, helped him develop the novel’s incipient concept. In BG he deals with how human beings can intentionally uncover hidden pasts and incite tribal hatred, not love, consequently reversing and controlling the so-called public history. In BG, although the past memory or history of Britons’ genocide of Saxons has long been erased, Wistan, a Saxon warrior with conscious hatred of Britons, succeeds in digging up the buried history and turning the table in favour of his tribe, with the possible result of the other tribe’s downfall. Thus considered, BG can be labelled as a dystopian novel under cover of its fantastic features. Ishiguro’s aim is rather different, however, as demonstrated in his argument on the relation of love and death, which he says NLMG and BG have in common. In order to confirm this, Axl and Beatrice’s parting scene requires further examination. Ishiguro explains the voyage to the island is about metaphorical death, then insists love, although hard to find and maintain, can trump death if carried out even halfway successfully. This idea offers a ray of hope to the old couple’s fatal parting. In spite of its inevitability, Ishiguro does not negate or bury the memory of their long-fostered love; Axl manages to persuade Beatrice into agreeing to remember it still in the face of black shadows marring it. Here is Ishiguro’s positive belief in memory’s intrinsic value, which he has explored throughout his literary career. The same applies to the public history. After the revival of the buried giant, or the hidden societal collective memory, all that is left for Britons is tribal ruin or death. However, the ambivalent position of Wistan, who lived among Britons in his childhood, has him treasure love as well as hatred for them. He then entrusts Edwin, a promising Saxon boy, with the task of taking over their tribe’s vengeance. But Edwin, who gradually sympathizes with Axl and Beatrice, also emotionally vacillates, excluding them from his scheme. The two Saxons’ inner scruples are a saving grace in the devastating future prospects, particularly since they are triggered by the memory of love and bonds. Ishiguro attempts to fuse severe social realism with generous emotional idealism. BG reflects both Ishiguro’s established literary tastes and the ever-developing targets of his creative attention.
言語 en
内容記述
内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 本稿は日本英文学会中国四国支部第69回大会シンポジアム「Kazuo Ishiguro 再考―さらなる解釈の可能性を求めて」(2016年10月30日,愛媛大学)において口頭発表した原稿に加筆修正を加えたものである。
出版者
出版者 広島大学英文学会
言語
言語 jpn
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
資源タイプ departmental bulletin paper
出版タイプ
出版タイプ VoR
出版タイプResource http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85
ID登録
ID登録 10.15027/45941
ID登録タイプ JaLC
収録物識別子
収録物識別子タイプ ISSN
収録物識別子 0288-2876
収録物識別子
収録物識別子タイプ NCID
収録物識別子 AN0002064X
開始ページ
開始ページ 45
書誌情報 英語英文學研究
Hiroshima studies in English language and literature

巻 62, p. 45-58, 発行日 2018-03-30
見出し
大見出し 論文
言語 ja
見出し
大見出し Articles
言語 en
旧ID 45941
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