英文摘要 |
In 1997, Annie Proulx, already renowned for her 1994 Pulitzer prize-winning novel The Shipping News, made headlines once again with her most controversial story to date, 'Brokeback Mountairu' First published in The New Yorker, the 30-page novella concerned itself with the topic of homosexual love between two Wyoming farmhands beginning in the summer of 1963, and the twenty-year relationship that results between them. In 2004, Ang Lee began directing a film version of the story that has also been gaining controversy. The topic of gay cowboys overturns mainstream conservative beliefs and challenges the macho image of the classic American cowboy (i.e., Gene Autry, John Wayne). As the film gains momentum, the 'gay cowboy story' has been both hailed as a vehicle for gay activism and vilified by American conservatives advocating a gay marriage ban. An initial reading of the story through the lens of modern gender theory demonstrates, however, that the story is not overtly political, but rather seeks universality in the experience of human longing for affection and acceptance. Both Proulx and Ang Lee share a vision that 'Brokeback Mountain' depicts a love that transcends gender or prejudice. |