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Chinese(简体) Funded by LTI Korea Available

库勒巴尔男爵的城堡

库勒巴尔男爵的城堡
Author
崔宰勋
Co-Author
-
Translator
王宁
Publisher
华中科技大学出版社
Published Year
2016
Country
CHINA
Classification

KDC구분 > literature > Korean Literature > Korean Fiction > 21st century

Original Title
퀴르발 남작의 성
Original Language

Korean(한국어)

Romanization of Original
Kwireubal namjagui seong
ISBN
9787568020695
Page
219
Volume
-
Choi Jae-hoon
  • Choi Jae-hoon
  • Birth : 1973 ~ Unknown
  • Occupation : Novelist
  • First Name : Jae-hoon
  • Family Name : Choi
  • Korean Name : 최제훈
  • ISNI : 0000000428549636
  • Works : 8
No. Call No. Location Status Due Date Reservation
1 중국어 813 최제훈 퀴-한 LTI Korea Library Available - -
Descriptions
  • Chinese(简体)

《库勒巴尔男爵的城堡》由七篇短篇小说和一篇代替后记的微型小说组成,汇集了崔宰勋的早期作品,也是他zui具实验性的、类型丰富的一系列作品。同名短篇《库勒巴尔男爵的城堡》追踪了库勒巴尔男爵这个人物和有关他的传闻在不同的时空间中被传达给人们时被扭曲变形的过程。小说聚焦于故事在通过民间传说、小说、电影的方式流传到法国、美国、日本和韩国的过程中,是怎样被传达者根据自身的需要进行重新诠释的,通过这篇小说,作者对于“故事的本质到底是什么”这个问题,提出了疑问,进行了思索,也给出了解答。《夏洛克福尔摩斯的隐秘案件》打造了一个由诞生于作者笔下的小说人物来侦破作者的死亡案件的莫大讽刺。《怪物的辩白》则将玛丽雪莱的小说《弗兰肯斯坦》进行了改写重组。在这篇小说中,作者立足于被扭曲误解的弗兰肯斯坦和作家按照自己的创想所诠释的《弗兰肯斯坦》,追踪着这部小说的结局和真相,既打破了现实/非现实之间的界限,同时也让人有机会直面内心深处的怪物。收录于这本小说集中的《不过呢,玛丽亚》、《她的结》、《影子标本》等作品也无一不显示出崔宰勋对于文字的掌控能力和缜密的想象力。1.崔宰勋是韩国文坛一颗新星,靠独特的叙事技艺和洗练的文笔跻身于2010年代韩国新一代“会讲故事的人”之列。2.他的作品《七只猫眼》(我社也已购得版权)已经授权出影视版权,目前正在韩国进行影片制作。3.崔宰勋小说zui大的魅力在于“趣味”,而且这种趣味是和插科打诨、轻佻浮躁完全不同的另一种境界。如同韩国小说家郑怡贤所说,“他的小说非常好看。书里的那些人物让人觉得既熟悉又陌生,所有的故事都任性发挥,信不信由你。沉浸在崔宰勋所编造的‘谎言’中,不知不觉间,身边那个呆板明了的真实世界忽然变得很陌生。于是冷清孤单的感觉蓦地袭来,让人忍不住战栗。”库勒巴尔男爵的城堡1993年6月9日,韩国首尔K大学白正仁讲师,公共课“电影中的女性们”好了,开始上课。可是刚才点过名的人数和实际人头数怎么差这么多?看来有不少替身演员在这儿一人分饰多角。看在你们演技不错的份上,今天我就不追究了。把窗户关上,外面真够吵的。没那么热吧?喊热的那个同学干吗还穿着外套?今天这节课探讨的电影是爱德华·费舍尔导演1953年的作品《库勒巴尔男爵的城堡》。光是这片名就透着一股阴森恐怖的哥特味道吧?这部电影的原著同名小说出自法裔作家米歇尔·佩罗之手,发表于1932年。由费舍尔亲自改编,电影结尾和原著有很大不同。这部电影是费舍尔导演生涯的第二部或者第三部作品,当时他还是个名不见经传的新人。反倒是20世纪50年代在好莱坞红极一时的大明星杰西卡·海沃德的出演成了当时的焦点话题。有看过这部电影的吗?看过的请举手。真难得,居然有三个。读过原著小说的呢?……嗯,果然不出所料,一个都没有。悲哀呀!开学时的课程计划白公布了。我说过很多次了,请大家先看过电影之后再来上课。我们这是探讨电影的课程,如果你们连电影内容都不知道,两个小时不就是光听我一个人说了吗?看各位的表情好像觉得这很正常。这次期末考试,我打算出跟电影画面相关的考题。《库勒巴尔男爵的城堡》里男爵的发型是?1.大背头;2.短发……我可不是开玩笑哦。我们可以把这部电影中“男爵的城堡”看作是隐藏着人类欲

source: https://www.amazon.com/dp/756802069X

Book Reviews1

  • Chinese(简体)
    [CHINESE] The Origin and Inheritance of Imagination: The Castle of the Baron de Curval by Choi Jae-hoon
    I like the thrill novels give. Because when you are immersed in the illusion of consciousness that words create, you feel you have stepped away from this world for a moment. As a writer myself, when I read such books, I feel something stirring in my heart and find new insight and inspiration. Choi Jae-hoon’s The Castle of the Baron de Curval is an astonishing piece of work not least because of its unexpected format, but it still shows signs of the traditional narrative technique of East Asian literature. At least my sensitive senses react to its traces. Choi uses the right mix of references to Western classics, deconstruction and extension of images, and even humor to make the reader feel confused between reality and fantasy, and the past and present. The attention Choi has paid to craft the story is clearly visible and he comes across as a master artisan weaving his fabric. The sentences are elaborate, the logic clear, and the frame kaleidoscopic. Choi appears to be deeply interested in icons generally considered grim, such as medieval culture, dark fairy tales, classical horror stories, and mental illness. He then combines these elements with academic research to unfold the narrative. When readers read a book, either their knowledge grows or they respond to the content. And yet Choi never tells us what the story is. Rather, he flips it on its head and makes things pop up at unexpected moments, making readers feel as if they are experiencing virtual reality through VR headsets. For example, Sherlock Holmes makes an entrance and begins to investigate the death of his creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle; or Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein who died nearly one hundred and sixty years ago, starts to have a conversation with the novelist. The Mobius-strip-like plot unfolds endlessly in this manner. I believe Choi takes this approach to disrupt the standard single-story narrative to make the story gripping and less cumbersome to read by inserting his knowledge of Western classics into it. In “The Castle of the Baron de Curval,” Choi highlights the cannibalism of the Baron, who revels in eating children’s flesh, through eclectic perspectives of cinema, journalism, comparative studies, and folklore. The plot offers up new interpretations and analyses of this grotesque theme through interviews and conversations of people from wide-ranging fields. It dazzles the reader as if they are inside a mysterious labyrinth but then covertly reveals that the fictional character of the Baron has his own story. Readers might feel at first as if the plot is a ragtag collection of people airing their thoughts in front of a camera as in a documentary, but Curval’s story is subtly hidden within it and generates a desire to continue reading the novel. In “Her Knots Disordered,” Choi displays an understanding of so-called female psychology and his treatment of the details is skilled. The narrative structure is simple and both the plot and development are accessible but the emotions of the characters are colorfully handled. He expresses the feelings of two people who, unsure if they are friends or lovers, find it difficult to break the ice even though they have to do so. Especially in the scene where the female protagonist has an outburst of jealousy, the psychological description is handled superbly. In “A Stuffed Shadow,” Choi expresses the loneliness, oppression, delirium, and compassion hidden in the mind of a middle-aged man. He unfolds the story from a first-person perspective. We witness the multiple personalities of the protagonist who go by Tom, Jerry, and Ubin respectively. The protagonist appears to inform his doctor of his situation, but their conversation betrays his different personalities. They are lively, eccentric, and even morbid. Left-handed, kleptomaniac, bipolar—these quirks or pathologies combine to create an unusual personality. In fact, this is a device to show the protagonist’s flaws, loneliness, autism, and delusion. Choi controls the narrative pace through subtle variances in the protagonist’s tone. Normally, when the protagonist is in his right mind, he talks about his family and himself but when he is unstable, the description is exaggerated, the words are ambiguous, and the story turns absurd. “By the Bye, Maria” shows yet another narrative style. The different behaviors of two people of vaguely marriageable age (one married and the other just divorced) in their relationships with the opposite sex are revealed through metaphor and comparison. To add to the two people’s awkward and dull situation, Choi brings in yet another character called Mary and in doing so portrays the shock, trouble, and futile emotions that come with marriage. Choi expresses the delicate and inaccessible emotional changes within people’s minds in a new way. He draws out the most appropriate interpretation with accurate yet unique analogy. Sentences like “My love was one day marked ‘Address Unknown’ and dropped in the return box” or “Marriage is like an electric razor that keeps the relationship alive even when the power supply of love is cut off” are good examples. Personally, I envy people like Choi who are blessed with the power of imagination.His infinite creativity and impeccable writing are at a level unreachable by ordinary people. He not only displays a rich imagination but also gives readers sufficient grounds for it. In an interview, Choi mentioned that he was influenced by Akutagawa Ryunosuke and Jorge Luis Borges. I think this is because both writers were never confined by their inherent cognition but explored humankind’s destiny and logic in their own unique way. This method can sometimes be difficult and abstruse to read. Choi’s imagination always has a reason. He uses different plots for each story and writes in a variety of ways. He unfolds the story sometimes like an encyclopedia, sometimes from an omniscient and omnipresent viewpoint, at times as if lurking within the story, and at others as if transcending time and space. When you read his book, you feel many emotions, and this leads to confidence and creativity. When you read Choi’s stories, you feel as if your cells are endlessly splitting. Although the format may be a short story, the structure is never linear. Some stories have simple context that could well be dull, but he constantly stimulates his readers by inserting fitting comparisons and metaphors throughout. He reveals the truth and philosophy of life in the conflict of these seemingly unrelated rhetorical devices. The British writer Joseph Conrad said, “Every age is fed on illusions, lest men should renounce life early and the human race come to an end.” This seems to be why Choi presents characters such as Frankenstein, Dracula, and witches in his stories. This is because it is the origin of imagination and the inheritance of imagination.
    2025-03-31
    by Vandean

Related Resources2