Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
rose from the sofa and went to Peter. And it was awfully strange, he thought, how she still had the power as she came
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rose from the sofa and went to Peter.
And it was awfully strange, he thought, how she still had the power as she came tinkling, rustling, still had the power as she came across the room, to make the mood which he detested, rise at Bouron on the terrace in the summer sky. (55) As can be seen from the short passage above, linguistic deviations, violations, breaking of the old cohesive sentence sequences, and rejection of gradual linear realistic description actually 19 established a new aim of literature: to reveal the picture of human mind, to portray the subconscious, and to depict the natural flow of thoughts in one’s mind (as illustrated by the part of the extract in bold) which was the essence of a modern human being. The present extract from Mrs. Dalloway demonstrates the subtle manner in which the narrative voice shifts and how this shift can affect a reader’s perspective, but it can also serve as a criterion by which we can measure Woolf’s innovative style of writing. The predicates in bold serve to move the reference time of the narrative forward, however, the superficial temporal incoherence occurs in the given extract, which actually represents a purposeful violation of the common linear narrative sequence: present moments are intermingled with short flashbacks, memories, and impressions. Indeed, although at first glance the style of writing in modern literature may seem chaotic and obscure, this emphasis on absurdity actually help to show the picture of the world from the point of view of a modern human. Purposelessness of cruelty, destructivity of progress, alienation and loneliness, nothingness of self-important moments of personal experience replicate in human consciousness and leave a footnote there. In her novels, having two possible techniques that would allow her to enter characters’ consciousness and present their personal impressions, namely, direct and indirect style of representation, Woolf chooses to reveal her characters’ interior monologues and widely uses the method of Free Indirect Discourse (FID) Thus, it seems certainly that modernist literature provides valuable insights of human mind and investigates various patterns of thought in different literary discourse. (Jen Green at al. 1999:65) Interestingly, Green (1999) develops the insights about the peculiarities of modernist fiction by drawing a parallel between the radically new representation of history, temporality, and time in literature which has not received much attention in the theoretical and practical analysis of literary works. In the theorist’s opinion, time, in modernist literature, is a very important issue that acts both as internal or external circumstances and as an active participant in a piece of fiction. Indeed, modernist concept of temporality may take the reader through a day in the life of a narrator, whereas in Realism, the reader is taken into a year in the life of the characters, as pointed out by Stevenson. In his words (1998 :4), “departures from the serial, chronological construction of storytelling, for example – its usual beginning, middle, and end – are by no means uniquely the invention of modernist fiction.” In Modernism, time is viewed as disjointed and cyclical, and the reader is moved from one image to another rather than in a start to finish manner - a juxtaposition of events may unfold at once. Similar ideas are expressed by Onega and Landa who foreground the fact (1998:207) that the representation of external temporal reality in modernist fiction became “atrophied, or, at least, stylized as the focus of attention shifted to the characters’ inner processes - imaginative and psychological”. Interestingly, Armstrong characterizes modernist literature as “the 20 notion of uneven and competing temporalities” (2005: 7) and states that unlike in Romanticism which celebrated the beauty and the value of feelings, modernist authors put emphasis on the interrelation of details, separate elements, and pictures, and portray the world as a certain mosaic which consists of different experience, spatial, and temporal extracts. By comparison, the theorist Ivor Armstrong Richards (1965:124) argues that this belief in a cyclical time also encourages a cognitive exploration of the subconscious because the reader can see the attempt to place every detail inside the characters’ mind, away from the body and feel free to explore the inner working of one’s mind and subconsciousness. Allen (1954: 65) complements Armstrong, Richards, and Stevenson’s statements by arguing that experimenting with language and breaking the norms of traditional writing bring about a fascination with the way in which one projects reality within the workings of the mind. Besides, Stevenson alleges that the distinctive feature of Modernism in all spheres of art including literature is its diversity. Through a close interface study and analysis of Modernism as a cultural, aesthetic, philosophical, and literary movement, he explores the connections between the new stylistic developments and the shifting politics of reason, mind, and consciousness. Indeed, these Stevenson’s insights provide a detailed and useful overview of the twentieth century human philosophy and the changing system of norms and values. For instance, according to the linguist, the questioning of human life with or without God is one of the most important theoretical and philosophical assumptions developed in the period of Modernism. Besides, a modernist human being expresses a constant wish to escape from his past and to consolidate in the future, but sees no constructive steps that would help him to do this. According to Stevenson (1998:9), “many contemporary commentators confirm the extent of new challenges to the period’s life and thinking, indicating how inescapable the effects of the new industrialized, technologized modernity of life seemed at the time.” Thus, we can arrive at a logical conclusion that all these psychological issues were based on the multidimensional character of human mind that was one of the main interests of modern writers. From above considerations it could be preliminarily concluded that the questioning human spirit could be seen as part of a necessary search for ways to make sense of a broken world both in the literary works of Romanticism and Modernism, modernist literature often moves beyond the limitations of the realist fiction with a concern for larger factors such as social or historical emergence of city life as a central force in society. In addition, an early attention to the described object as an independent entity became in later Modernism a preoccupation with form. Where Romanticism stressed the subjectivity of experience, modernist writers were more acutely conscious of the objectivity of their surroundings. In Modernism the object is described, analyzed, and 21 revealed by means of the spatial and temporal circumstances the characters are surrounded by. This is a shift from an epistemological aesthetic to an ontological aesthetic or, in simpler terms, a shift from a philosophy based on knowledge and experience to an intuitive philosophy shaped by human mind. Indeed, this significant shift is the basis of the art and literature of Modernism. (Genienė 2007:164) Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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