英文摘要 |
At the end of the 19th century, Britain reached its peak of imperial power. As the British expanded their colonial power across the ocean, they expected the resistance from the colonized but they still succeeded in subjugating their colonized relentlessly. However, hardly had they foreseen the encounter with such different natural environment would accelerate the precipitation of the collapse of the empire. Among few British writers who have tried to deal with the backlash of the colonial process against their country, Caryl Churchill is one who describes in her Cloud Nine (1979) the dismantling power of weather and climate in Africa, which sabotages the Victorian patriarchal social codes in Act I and anticipates the full-blown emancipation of sexuality in Act II. To illustrate this climatic counterforce in Cloud Nine, I will employ postcolonial theories expounded by Hommi Bhabha, Bill Ashcroft, and others to demonstrate that confronted with the deceptive weather in Africa, the British colonizers inevitably lose the hold of and claim on their colonized subjects as well as themselves. |