Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
The Evolution of the Notion of Time in Literary Discourse
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2.2.The Evolution of the Notion of Time in Literary Discourse
There is enough evidence to claim that in their works, modernist writers formulated a completely new approach to the treatment of the notion of time and temporality. Consequently, it seems wise to overview the development of the notion of time over centuries in the spheres of science, art, religion, and philosophy in order to see what new unexplored challenging dimensions and layers of this wide entity have been discovered and described so far. Indeed, according to Stevenson (1998:106), modernists believed that conventional understanding of time does not reflect the way in which time actually influences and is influenced by human lives. Indeed, time seems to be incapable of being measured by such symbolic representations as hours, days, or months. Consequently, a writer cannot refer accurately to such arbitrary divisions as past, present, and future. Time flows in uninterrupted chain; yet the individual carried along by time is not restricted to one dimension; with the help of memory, a person can travel back and exist in the past before being swept along toward the future. Since modernists felt that the real understanding of the depth of time exists only within the individual, they often chose experimental patterns of time for their literary works. Baldic (1996:86) complements Stevenson’s thoughts by adhering to the opinion that the traditional method of handling time sequence in literature was followed by centuries of writers before Virginia Woolf and other modernist authors introduced their own understanding and interpretation of this issue. According to the traditional view of time, the past, present, and future exist in a succession, along which man moves the whole his or her life, because the present moment is moving steadily forward, revealing what once was the future. Baldic develops his ideas by 37 claiming that these meaningful present moments discovered by man’s successive motion, form the medium that runs regularly from birth to death for the traditionalist. It is, therefore, of necessity to him that fiction expresses this orderly progression of time. In the traditional novel, the structure is based on the chronological order of events. Interestingly enough, Lee (1977:56) notices that the most popular images that express the traditional view of time in art are the descriptions of nature: natural phenomena such as rain or snow or water bodies such as rivers as if comparing passing time and flowing streams of water. For instance, in the novels of Woolf, in particular in To the Lighthouse, Lee treats water as a symbol a steady, regular, and inevitable passing of hours, days, and years. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the majority of scientific experiments were based on practical observation. Besides, many thinkers and writers contributed to the methods of science and argued that knowledge can only be gained from experience. For instance, according to Gore (2005:34), the French mathematician and philosopher Rene Descartes claimed convincingly that “world was made up of two basic things: mind and matter”. He considered mathematics to be the supreme science, and calculations of numbers were named the best way of investigating and understanding things. Naturally, under the influence of these scientific ideas, people were concerned with time as a measure of duration as to other conventional thinkers; time has but one dimension, a linear order from an indefinitely stretching past to an indefinitely stretching future. By comparison, Baldic shares his view with Gore and declares that in the seventeenth century, scientists measured and analyzed time by means of experimental methods as an entity that can be limited, divided, and, in a way, even controlled. Isaac Newton supported this concept of time in his the scientific theories of the seventeenth century. Indeed, philosophers and writers always face undeniable influence of the events and changes occurring in the world in the fields of science and art; thus, it is possible to achieve the conclusion that the same attitudes shape the scientist the writer of literature. (Baldic 1996:205) Genienė (2007:256) complements Gore and Baldic’s study by stating that the seventeenth century marked the emergence of the modern world with its scientific and technological advances. Seventeenth and eighteenth century philosophers and writers were, however, still interested in the past only as the history leading up to the present moment, rather than as a part of the human history that is a continuous process, or a chain of experiences and events. Stevenson (1998:11) calls this new understanding of time “a kind of epistemological shift, from relative confidence towards a Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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