Romanticism elaborates a model of fragmentation, different from the fragment as ruined part of a totality from which it is shorn. Rodolphe Gasché argues that the concept of the Romantic fragment would have to be 'radically recast' to be applied to contemporary literature. It is via Maurice Blanchot that the fragment is 'recast' into an event in which 'all literature is the fragment'. This book investigates that turn, exploring its implications in the work of Blanchot, Samuel Beckett and J. M. Coetzee. Blanchot's 'recast' fragment demands that literature become fragmentary whether it carries the form of the fragment or not. Beckett's prose work unfolds a part of fragmentary writing that appears to be degenerative, as words collide and syntactic structures are eroded. However, fragmentary writing allows the presentation of a damaged work, one under the threat of abandonment, as work in progress; being neither finished nor continued. The work of Coetzee demonstrates the fragment's relation to Levinasian ethics, inviting a responsiveness to the 'other': a situation that maintains the singularity of the work without reducing it to particular critical positions. The legacy of the fragment remains as much a responsibility for modern literature as for the event of the German Romantic fragment. Fragmentary Futures argues that the fragment points to an impossibility governing the generation of literature itself. The German Romantic fragment is still to come, haunting literature. The 'recast' fragment does not exorcise such a revenant but makes its future appearance more fascinating. Dr Daniel Watt is a Lecturer in English and Drama. His research interests include philosophical and literary influences on theatre and performance in the twentieth century, particularly the work of Samuel Beckett and Tadeusz Kantor. His other research work is focused on literature and ethics, fragmentary writing, and the nature of the puppet, or abject object, in performance. 'Bringing to mind the forgotten legacy of German Romanticism apropos the fragment in its orientation towards an always open futurity, Daniel Watt's Fragmentary Futures: Blanchot, Beckett, Coetzee stages an urgent intervention in the poetics of the fragmentary and fragmentation. Taking as his focus the texts of Maurice Blanchot, Samuel Beckett and J.M. Coetzee, Watt, with admirable intellectual rigour, critical inventiveness and stylistic panache, responds to his singular examples with his own singular acts of ethical attestation. Fragmentary Futures is at once a testimony to the ethical commitment of art in the face of the other, the undecidable and the incommensurable, and also a mnemotechnic of the fragment. Structured as an endlessly open, constantly recast series of fragmentary memories of the future, Fragmentary Futures forces on its readers the inescapable necessity of a continual, self-reflexive interrogation that refuses to find solace in false closure. Daniel Watt has done critics and theorists an invaluable service, whilst, at the same time, situated himself, through his telling critical register, as one of the most significant contemporary spiritual heirs of Jena.' Julian Wolfreys, author of Writing London: Inventions of the City
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这本《碎片的未来》读起来真是一场感官的探险,作者的笔触如同迷雾中闪烁的微光,时而清晰,时而又隐没在更深层次的哲学思辨里。我特别喜欢它那种**碎片化的叙事结构**,仿佛我们置身于一个正在崩塌又同时孕育新生的世界,每一章都是一幅未完成的拼图,需要读者自己去寻找连接点。这本书并没有提供一个明确的“未来图景”,而是更像是在邀请我们进入一个充满不确定性的意识流之中。书中对科技伦理和人性异化的探讨,尤其是在虚拟现实与真实自我界限模糊的描写上,达到了令人不安的真实感。那种冷峻的、近乎临床的观察视角,让那些宏大的未来概念变得触手可及,甚至让人感到一阵寒意。叙事节奏的把握非常巧妙,时而急促如心跳加速的追逐戏,时而又缓慢到近乎停滞,沉浸在对某个微小细节的无限打磨之中,这种张弛有度的节奏感,极大地增强了阅读的沉浸体验,让人放不下手,即使合上书本,那些关于“碎片”和“未来”的意象也会在脑海中持续盘旋,久久不散。
评分对于长期关注实验性文学的读者来说,这本书简直是一剂强心针。它摒弃了传统叙事中对因果逻辑的执着,转而探索**“同步性”和“巧合”在构建意义中的核心地位**。情节的推进更多依赖于意象的累积和情绪的共振,而非传统的冲突解决。有那么几段,文字的密度之高,信息量之大,我不得不放慢速度,甚至需要做笔记来理清人物关系和时间线,这绝不是一本可以轻松消遣的作品。它要求读者投入巨大的认知资源。然而,正是这种挑战性,造就了其独特的价值。它不是在讲述一个故事,而是在**建构一种新的认知模型**。读完后,你会发现自己看待日常事物的角度似乎发生了微妙的偏移,那些原本以为稳固的界限——比如美丑、过去未来、生与死——都变得松动和可疑。这是一部需要多次重读才能完全消化的文本,每一次翻阅,都会从中挖掘出新的层次和未曾注意到的细微关联。
评分我必须承认,初读这本书时,我感到了一丝困惑,它完全不同于我预期的那种线性的、有明确情节发展的科幻小说。更像是一部关于**存在主义困境的诗意散文集**,只是披着一层赛博朋克的外衣。作者对于语言的运用达到了出神入化的地步,那些新造的词汇和拗口的句式,初读时颇有障碍,但一旦适应了这种独特的语境,你会发现它们精准地捕捉了那种**后人类语境下情感的疏离感**。书中某些章节,尤其是关于“记忆载体”和“数字幽灵”的描述,充满了令人窒息的美感,那种美是残破的、带有锈蚀感的,却又无比有力。它不试图取悦读者,也不提供廉价的答案,它只负责提出问题,而且是那种直击灵魂深处的、关于“我们是谁”以及“我们将去向何方”的终极疑问。对于那些寻求清晰情节和圆满结局的读者来说,这本书可能会显得有些晦涩难懂,但对于喜欢在文字迷宫中探索意义的“寻宝者”而言,它无疑是近年来最值得细嚼慢咽的佳作之一,每一个字都值得被反复掂量。
评分我通常对这种被贴上“后现代”、“解构主义”标签的作品持保留态度,但《碎片的未来》成功地将那些晦涩的理论概念,通过一种**高度个人化和私密的视角**进行了转化。主角的内心挣扎,那种对“真实体验”的极度渴望和对“被模拟的生活”的深深厌倦,是这本书最打动我的地方。作者没有去描绘宏大的战争场面或史诗般的征服,而是聚焦于个体在信息洪流中**如何维持自我完整性**的小规模斗争。书中的象征符号非常丰富,比如“蓝色的噪声”、“折叠的时间”,它们反复出现,每一次都带有略微不同的情感重量,迫使读者不断重新审视它们之间的关系。我尤其欣赏作者在描绘情感的“非线性衰减”方面所下的功夫——现代人的情感似乎正在被算法优化,变得高效却失去了深度,这本书把这种“情感的贫瘠化”描写得淋漓尽致,令人心痛。
评分老实说,这本书的**世界构建**手法简直是天才之举,但也是最考验耐心的部分。它没有用大段的背景介绍来为你铺陈设定,而是像考古学家一样,让你从散落在各处的文档、残缺的日志、加密的通讯记录中,艰难地拼凑出一个庞大而又衰败的社会结构。我花了近四分之一的时间才真正搞清楚“裂隙协议”到底意味着什么,以及那些被称为“回声者”的群体所扮演的角色。这种**“被动参与式”的阅读体验**,虽然增加了理解门槛,但一旦豁然开朗的瞬间到来,那种成就感是无与伦比的,仿佛自己真的解开了一个重大的秘密。书中的氛围营造得极其成功,那种弥漫在空气中的、由数据过载和环境污染共同导致的**压抑感和疲惫感**,即便透过纸张都能感受得到。这本书更像是对我们当前社会趋势的一种极端化预言,它没有给我们希望,但它清晰地描绘了我们正在走向的某种“不可逆转的终点”,让人读完后陷入长时间的沉默和反思。
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