Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
The Literary Context of Modernism
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1.2.The Literary Context of Modernism
There is enough evidence to claim that modernist literature is an opening up of the world in all of its forms - theoretically, philosophically, aesthetically, and politically. As stated by the theorist Juri Talvet (1998:327), before Modernism, people treated life and art from the realistic perspective. In other words, philosophers and artists aimed to project the world in an objective fashion and to mimetically portray every detail in the way it was. Modernist writing, however, takes the reader into a world of unfamiliarity, a deep introspection, a cognitive thought-provoking experience, scepticism of religion, and openness to different cultural awareness, technology innovations, and rebellious ideas. Indeed, the most important characteristic of modern world literature may be its struggle with the failure of traditional sources of moral authority. Here I adhere to Chana Kronfeld’s remark that “Modernism can be defined as a dynamic semantic hierarchy”. (1996: 22) In Kronfeld’s opinion, it is obvious that modernist literature has inherited scepticism not only of revelation and traditional religious standards but also of reason and community consensus as sources of meaning. Indeed, Onega and Landa in their study support these statements and claim (1996: 69) that a typical modern writer describes a state of disconnectedness in which the individual lacks real belonging, has no ultimate purpose in life, and is controlled by norms and standards rather than guided and fulfilled by sincere hopes and expectations. The globalization of modernist literature, in expanding the number of competing authorities and encouraging the readers all over the world to reflect on their own experience while reading about the lives of fictional characters, has reinforced the idea that no particular tradition can be accepted as universal and unquestionable. In fact, experimenting with language and breaking the traditions were typical characteristics of modernist literature. Vision and viewpoint became an essential aspect of the modernist novel as well. Modernist writers were supposed to create something new and attractive instead of simply employing an objective one-dimensional third-person narrative and portraying everything from the single perspective. As the theorist Robin Walz argues in his study, in modernist literature, “a high value is placed upon innovation and novelty, to make new art that transcends contemporary life and elevates the viewer, reader, or audience above the mundane”. (2008: 9) Thus, it is possible to claim that the way the story was told became more and more significant as it shaped the very essence of the story. Indeed, Philip Rice and Patricia Waugh complement Walz (1996:171) by saying that Henry James, William Faulkner, and many other modernist writers became popular among the readers mainly because they experimented with innovative fictional points of view. For instance, James often portrayed the fictional reality of his novels and short stories from a single character’s subjective viewpoint, while Faulkner’s novel The Sound and the Fury (1929) logically divided the 18 narrative into four sections, each giving the viewpoint of a different character. In the theorists’ opinion, this was done purposefully, in order to give the reader different perspectives and evaluations of the same situation described. Rice and Waugh develop their insights about the peculiarities of modernist literature and say that the famous Irish novelist and poet James Joyce also applied a number of technical innovations in his masterpieces and claimed that all these experiments were in a way the expression of the modernist novel that represents a break with the traditional naturalistic novels of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries written by Charles Dickens, Gustave Flaubert, Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, and many other writers. Allen complements Rice and Waugh by saying that “even in James and Conrad, the novelist figured as reporter or historian, recounting a sequence of actions ended before the reader takes up the novel to read. But with Joyce, readers are at the cutting edge of the characters’ minds; we share the continuous present of their consciousness. There is, obviously, an immense gain in intimacy and immediacy”. (1954:214) Thus, as can be seen from the evidence above, Modernism was a revolt against traditional literary forms and subjects that manifested itself strongly after the destruction of the First World War changed human history and philosophy. As a result, the traditional norms and standards of arranging a literary work assumed a relatively coherent and stable social order that could not harmonize with inner world of human beings. Indeed, modernist novels and poetry had to be analyzed on the basis of new criteria, thus, a school of New Criticism was established in the United States, which aimed to deal with a range of modernist innovations in literature. For instance, the theorists Norman S. Greenfield and William Champlin (1965) state that the notion of epiphany, which can be defined as a moment in which a character suddenly sees the transcendent truth of a situation, gained much attention from the critics who sought to examine literary works and to clarify their insights. A remarkable part of linguists’ attention was paid to the innovative modernist manners of producing narrative with the help of the methods of Free Indirect Speech and Free Indirect Thought .To demonstrate this, let us consider the following example from Virginia Woolf’s modernist novel Mrs. Dalloway (1964): (2) Now it was time to move and as a woman gathers her things together, her cloak, her gloves, her opera – glasses and gets up to go out of the theatre into the street, she Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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