Options
The (Im)possible Gift and Hospitality in The Age of Innocence and Babetteās Feast
Date Issued
2007
Date
2007
Author(s)
Huang, Yi-Lun
DOI
en-US
Abstract
The (Im)possobile Gift and Hospitality
in The Age of Innocence and Babetteās Feast
Abstract
By following the theories of Marcel Maussās study on gift exchange and Jacques Derridaās impossible gift, which stresses the non-reciprocity and impossible hospitality, I attempt to present a reading of The Age of Innocence and Babetteās Feast different from previous interpretations. The first chapter will be a basic survey of Maussās theories of gift exchange and Derridaās theories of gift and hospitality. I will summarize Maussās exchange theory to see how the three obligations of giving, receiving, and reciprocating function in archaic societies and how the social structure is constituted by these obligations and the behavior of exchange. Inspired by Georges Batailleās theory of unproductive expenditure, Derrida tries to complicate the issues of gift and hospitality to break Maussās circular exchange system, which is structured by the three obligations. Both the Derridean gift and the Derridean hospitality are impossible because they are not bound by the pacts of obligations. The absolute gift should be forgotten by donor and donee while the boundary between host and guest becomes tenuous in the absolute hospitality. I will try to demonstrate how these themes are developed in the three criticsā texts. The second chapter will discuss, through the dining scenes, how the characters of The Age of Innocence, are subject to the obligatory rules of gift and hospitality. And the issues of impossible gift, absolute hospitality, and the other in Babetteās Feast will be developed in the third chapter. Approaching The Age of Innocence and Babetteās Feast through the perspectives of gift, hospitality, and food, I intend not merely to explicate the implicit significance of the charactersā behavior and motives but also to explore the fascinating but ignored dimensions of the two texts.
in The Age of Innocence and Babetteās Feast
Abstract
By following the theories of Marcel Maussās study on gift exchange and Jacques Derridaās impossible gift, which stresses the non-reciprocity and impossible hospitality, I attempt to present a reading of The Age of Innocence and Babetteās Feast different from previous interpretations. The first chapter will be a basic survey of Maussās theories of gift exchange and Derridaās theories of gift and hospitality. I will summarize Maussās exchange theory to see how the three obligations of giving, receiving, and reciprocating function in archaic societies and how the social structure is constituted by these obligations and the behavior of exchange. Inspired by Georges Batailleās theory of unproductive expenditure, Derrida tries to complicate the issues of gift and hospitality to break Maussās circular exchange system, which is structured by the three obligations. Both the Derridean gift and the Derridean hospitality are impossible because they are not bound by the pacts of obligations. The absolute gift should be forgotten by donor and donee while the boundary between host and guest becomes tenuous in the absolute hospitality. I will try to demonstrate how these themes are developed in the three criticsā texts. The second chapter will discuss, through the dining scenes, how the characters of The Age of Innocence, are subject to the obligatory rules of gift and hospitality. And the issues of impossible gift, absolute hospitality, and the other in Babetteās Feast will be developed in the third chapter. Approaching The Age of Innocence and Babetteās Feast through the perspectives of gift, hospitality, and food, I intend not merely to explicate the implicit significance of the charactersā behavior and motives but also to explore the fascinating but ignored dimensions of the two texts.
Subjects
ē¦®ē©äŗ¤ę
儽客
ę®é
ēęÆ
å¾·åøé
gift exchange
hospitality
expenditure,Mauss
Derrida
Type
thesis
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
ntu-96-R92122009-1.pdf
Size
23.53 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):29a19d55210b0b1fd6a69d7362f9b7a2