英文摘要 |
This essay attempts to analyze the spatiality in Yi-Chun Lo’s fiction which is reconstructed by a singular form of light into various planes of dreams or events. Through a close examination of Yi-Chun Lo’s rhizomatic writing, this essay tries to go deep into this multi-tonic space which has been, so far, constructed by his eight novels. We hope to demonstrate what has been revealed by this multiplicity of writing: its singular dynamique, stasis, rapidness and slowness. With fragmented storyline, misconnected narration, rhizomatic correlation, labyrinthic texture, light between folds, Yi-Chun Lo’s writing compels finally the revelation of a spatiality which is visible only under a specific regime of light, or an invisible space becoming perceptible thanks to an exocentric verbal movement. Reading Yi-Chun Lo’s fiction turns to be a particular archaeology of space, an inquiry into the virtual space: Taipei, fiction’s setting, or maybe they are just the same thing. |