Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 650607
The City and the Highway : the Spatialization of the Double in R. L. Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and David Lynch’s Lost Highway
The City and the Highway : the Spatialization of the Double in R. L. Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and David Lynch’s Lost Highway // Folia linguistica et litteraria : časopis za nauku o jeziku i književnosti, 2012 (2012), 6; 161-174 (međunarodna recenzija, članak, znanstveni)
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Naslov
The City and the Highway : the Spatialization of the Double in R. L. Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and David Lynch’s Lost Highway
Autori
Matek, Ljubica
Izvornik
Folia linguistica et litteraria : časopis za nauku o jeziku i književnosti (1800-8542) 2012
(2012), 6;
161-174
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u časopisima, članak, znanstveni
Ključne riječi
city ; highway ; double ; London ; Los Angeles ; R.L. Stevenson ; David Lynch
Sažetak
To exemplify the close connection between space and human identity, the paper explores two end-of- the-century works of art: Stevenson’s novella The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886), and David Lynch’s film The Lost Highway (1997), each of which presents a different kind of space as the basis for exploration and understanding of the instability of human identity. The concept of double identity situated in and provoked by the appearance of a fin de siècle metropolis, mutated at the end of the twentieth century into a more fluid conceptualization of self as ultimately ambiguous and unknowable, which is represented by the transient space of a highway. As Augè proposes, the erasure of frontiers caused by globalization also erases the boundaries between the individual and his or her environment through the multiplication of the spaces of circulation, consumption and communication, that is highways of different kinds, or, more specifically, non- places. While Stevenson proposed the idea that there are two sides to every person and expressed the dangers arising from the possibility of using scientific methods in order to unleash the “lower” side, for Lynch identity is no longer identifiable or graspable at all, but open to various contested perspectives, none of which can ever prevail. The fluidity or instability of the subject is different than the one expressed in Stevenson because it is ever-changing and incomprehensible. At the end of the twentieth century, marked by the constant mobility on the physical or virtual highway, the assumption of an identity, fluid yet explainable in terms proposed by the fin de siècle science and worldview, no longer exists.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Filologija
Citiraj ovu publikaciju:
Časopis indeksira:
- Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC)
- Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)