ズミ2 の山 10 月 3 週
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○自由な題名
◎土

○Men dream of women(感) 英文のみのページ(翻訳用)
Men dream of women. Women dream of the1mselves being dreamt of. Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at. Women constantly meet glances which act like mirrors, reminding them of how they look, or how they should look. Behind every glance is a judgment. Sometimes the glance they meet is their own, reflected back from a real mirror. A woman is always accompanied--except when quite alone and, perhaps, even then by her own image of herself. While she is walking across a room or weeping at the death of her father she cannot avoid envisaging herself walking or weeping. From earliest childhood she is taught and persuaded to survey herself continually. She has to survey everything she is and everything she does because how she appears to others, and particularly how she appears to men, is of crucial importance for what is normally thought of as the success of her life.
A woman in the culture of privileged Europeans is first and foremost a sight to be looked at. What kind of sight is revealed in the average European oil-painting? There were as many portraits of women as there were portraits of men. But in one category of painting, women were the principal, ever-recurring subject. This category is the nude. In the nudes of European painting we can discover some of the criteria and conventions by which women were and are traditionally judged and seen.
What is a nude? In his book on the nude, Kenneth Clark says that being naked is simply being without clothes, whereas the nude, according to him, is a form of art. I would put it differently. To be naked is to be oneself. To be nude is to be seen naked by others and yet not recognised for oneself. In the traditions of the European oil-painting, nakedness is not taken for granted as in archaic art. Nakedness is a sight for those who are dressed.
We can begin with the story of Adam and Eve, as told in Genesis'

When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good to eat, and that it was pleasing to the eye and tempting to contemplate, she took some and ate it. She also gave her husband some and he ate it. Then the eyes of both of them were opened and they discovered that they were naked.... But the Lord God called to the man and said to him, 'Where are you?' He replied, 'I heard the sound as you were walking in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked, and I hid myself.'...To the woman He said: 'I will increase your labour and your groaning, and in labour you shall bear children. You shall be eager for your husband, and he shall be your master.'

Two things are striking about this story. The couple become aware of being naked because, as a result of eating the apple, each sees the other differently. Nakedness in this story is created in the mind of the beholder. The second striking fact is that the woman is blamed and is punished by being made subservient* to the man. In relation to the woman, the man becomes the agent of God.
In medieval art the story is often illustrated, scene following scene, as in a strip-cartoon. During the Renaissance the narrative sequence disappears, and the single moment usually chosen to be depicted is the moment of shame. The couple wear fig-leaves or make a modest gesture with their hands. But now their shame is not so much in relation to one another as to the clothed spectator. It is the spectator's looking which shames them. Their drama is that they have been seen by us.
Later, as painting became more secular, many other subjects offered the opportunity of painting nudes. But always in the European tradition the nude implies an awareness of being seen by the spectator. The bodies are not naked as they are: they are naked as seen by us.
Certainly I would not deny the crucial part that seeing plays in sexuality. But there is a great difference between being seen as oneself naked (or seeing another in that way) and a body being put on display. To be naked is to be without disguise. To be on display is to have the surface of one's own skin, the hairs of one's own body, turned into a disguise, a disguise which cannot be discarded. Among the tens of thousands of European nudes there are perhaps twenty or thirty exceptions, where the painter, in love with the woman, has painted her revealed as herself.
But until Impressionism there were very few. Most of the nudes have been lined up by their painters for the pleasure of the male spectator-owner who will assess them as comparative sights. Their nudity is another form of dress. They are condemned to never being naked. With their clothes off, they are as formal as with their clothes on. Those women who are not judged beautiful--are not beautiful. Those who are--are awarded the prize. The prize is to be owned.
In the European oil-painting the second person, or the second person who matters, is the stranger looking at the picture. The woman must address herself to this stranger.
Sometimes a painting includes a male lover. But the woman's attention is rarely directed towards him. She looks away from him, or she looks out of the picture towards the man who considers himself her true lover--the spectator-owner.
Take the famous Bronzino Allegory of Time and Love in the National Gallery. A boy kneels on a cushion to kiss a woman. She is Venus. But the way her body is arranged has nothing to do with that kissing. Her body is arranged in the way it is to display it to the spectator looking at the picture. The picture is made to appeal to his sexuality. It has nothing to do with her sexuality. The convention of not painting the hair on a woman's body helped towards the same end. Hair is associated with sexual power, with passion. The woman's sexual passion needed to be minimised so that the clothed spectator might feel he had the monopoly of such passion. Women were there to feed an appetite, not to have any of their own.
The nude in European oil-painting is usually presented as an ideal subject. It is said to be an expression of the European humanist spirit. I do not want to reject this claim totally, but I have tried to question it by starting off from a different viewpoint. Durer, who believed in the ideal nude, thought that this ideal could be constructed by taking the shoulders of one body, the hands of another, the breasts of another, and so On. Was this humanist idealism? Or was it the result of a total indifference to who any one person really was? Do the nudes of the European oil-painting celebrate, as we're normally taught, the women within them, or the male voyeur? Is their sexuality inside the frame or in front of it? These questions and any others I may have raised will remain rhetorical unless it is women who answer them.

★極東の島国日本(感)
 【1】「極東の島国日本」などとしばしばいわれるように、日本を孤立した「島国」とする見方は、おそらく現代日本人の圧倒的多数の常識であり、これまでの多くの日本人論、日本文化論もそれを大前提として論じられてきたといってよい。
 【2】そして日本の「島国」であることが強調される場合、そこには対立する二つの文脈があったと思われる。【3】その一つは、とくに敗戦後、日本の国際社会への復帰に当って、それまでの独善的、閉鎖的な日本人のあり方に対する反省が強く求められたさいなどに強調された文脈で、「島国根性の打破」「島国性の克服」がこの中で声高に叫ばれたのであり、現在もなお同じ方向でこうした主張が展開されることが多い。
 【4】これに対し、他の一つとして、「島国」であることに日本人、日本文化の独自性、均質性の基盤を求める文脈があり、この見方は海によって周辺の世界から隔てられ、また海に守られることによって他民族による軍事的な侵略をまぬかれ、【5】政治的な支配を受けることなく周辺から技術、文化を吸収、「島国」の中でそれを熟成してきたところに、日本文化の特質を見出そうとする。それは日本が「島国」であることに積極的な意味を求めようとする見方で、現在の日本文化論の中で、こうした立場に立つ見解は多い。
 【6】この二つの見方は、まったく相反する方向から日本をとらえており、前者は「近代化論」につながる志向を持つのに対し、後者は日本文化の独自性を強調し、ときに天皇が長期にわたって日本列島の国家に関わりつづけてきたことを賛美する方向に進む場合も見られる。【7】とはいえ、この両者はともに共通した「日本は島国」という認識の上に立っている。そしてたしかに現在の日本国が島によって構成された国―「島国」であることはまぎれもない事実であり、この点についてはあたかも異論の入る余地のまったくない「常識」であるかの如くに見えるのである。
 【8】しかし一歩突き放してこの「常識」を見直してみると、それがしばしばきわめて底の浅い、偏った見方であることはただちに明白になる。
 【9】そもそも日本国が現在の島々から成り立つようになったのは敗戦後のことで、中国東北、朝鮮半島を植民地としていた「大日本帝国」の時代はそうでなかったという自明な事実――それが∵いかに嫌悪すべき状況であったとしても――を想起する必要がある。【0】この「常識」の基礎がまことに不安定であることはこれによっても明らかであろう。
 それとともに、この「常識」の中では、「島国」を構成する島は本州・四国・九州を中心とする島々に限定され、北海道・沖縄がほとんど欠落することになっている場合が多い。そしてそれを意識した議論の場合でも、琉球、アイヌの問題は「日本文化」の源流、古層としてとり上げられるにとどまり、日本列島の人間社会の歴史全体の中で、その独自な位置づけを与えられることはない、といってよかろう。
 そしてなによりも不思議なことは、「島国論」に基づく日本論が、現在の日本国内の島々の間の海のみを、人と人とを結びつけるものとし、他の海のすべてを、人と人とを隔てる海としている点である。しかし浪荒い玄界灘を隔てた九州と対馬の間に人びとの文化の交流が縄文時代以来あったとしながら、ドーバー海峡ほどではないにせよ、狭い対馬と朝鮮半島との間の海―朝鮮海峡が人と人とを隔離したなどと考える議論の不自然さは、誰が見ても明らかであろう。また南九州と奄美、沖縄との間に文化の交流があったとすれば、宮古、八重山と台湾との間に同じことのあったのは当然であり、東北と北海道の間の海が人と人とを結ぶならば、北海道とサハリン、沿海州との間の海が同じ役割をしないはずはないのである。
 「島国論」が成り立つためには、このあまりにも当然な事実が無視されなくてはならないのである。それゆえ、こうした「日本島国論」は根本的に、現在の日本国の国境に規定された俗説、国家そのものをつくりだした「虚構」であり、その非歴史性、一面性のゆえに、たやすく政治的なイデオロギーに転化しうる議論、と私は考える。

(網野善彦()「日本論の視座」より)