英文摘要 |
This paper follows Zygmunt Bauman’s observations of the frail human bonds exhausted in his theorization of “liquidity” to examine the vulnerable human connections implied in Kazuo Ishiguro’s “Crooner” and “Nocturne.” According to Bauman, people living in the liquid modern world cannot but experience the uncanny frailty of human bonds-the feeling of insecurity that frailty inspires and the conflicting desires that feeling prompts to tighten the bonds yet keep them loose. The human bonds only need to be loosely tied, so that they can be untied right afterwards when settings change. Connections thus become virtual relations because they are easy to enter and to exit. Immersed in the realm of liquid love, can dwellers in the liquid modern society prevent themselves from the fear of fixed connections by getting used to the virtual relations, or, project their anxieties of not being able to relate to “people in the know”? Characters in “Crooner” and “Nocturne,” the habitants in the liquid society, are afraid of being left alone, so they have to find others like them to assist them in unraveling or unpacking the liquid fear and to draw from the knowledge that they are not alone in their efforts to cope with the quandaries. If tomorrow they have to live without the security of togetherness they experience today, Ishiguro’s liquid strangers will still choose, with a view to a rosy picture in the realm of liquid love, to relate again without little delay. |