Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
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3 INTRODUCTION The early decades of the twentieth century were marked by new ideas, social and cultural developments, and remarkable changes in literature and linguistics. New historical, political, and socio-cultural crises and upheavals raised the idea of the changing time that was best expressed in literary works of the modernist movement, which rose as a revolt against old stereotypes used in the life and in the literature of Realism. Modernism emerged at the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century as an affirmation of the human power to invent, create, and evolve in response to the revolutionary advances in science and technology. According to the theorist Randall Stevenson (1998:56), this new trend was an attempt to break free from the accepted norms of logically arranged unsophisticated narrative in Realism. Modernists denied the way realists portrayed reality and argued that Realism did not depict real life as everything happens in the mind. Thus, for modernists, reality is a mirror that reflects human thoughts, feelings, and reactions exactly as they occur in their mind. It is possible to claim that Modernism was a revolt against the conservative values of Realism. The term encompasses the activities and output of those who argued that the traditional forms of art, literature, religious faith, social relationships, and daily life were becoming obsolete in the context of new economic, social, and political conditions in the modern urbanized and technologized world. The Modernist movement also questioned the belief that human abilities and achievements were based on loyalty to stable undeniable traditions. The theorist Chris Baldic emphasizes the fact (1996:49) that new insights, developments, and great changes in the sphere of art arose as a response to the meaninglessness of the war that led to the crisis of accepted norms and standards in human consciousness and in their world understanding. According to the critic, it became obvious that the institutions of government that had to protect people and ensure a safe life disappointed the civilized world and led it into a terrible confusion. Consequently, modernist writers no longer considered the reality as reliable means to portray the meaning of life, and therefore turned within themselves to discover the answers. In their literary works, modernists showed a rebellious new way of thinking and acting, their masterpieces were a way of leading a life, not just experimenting in style. Besides, according to Stevenson (1998), modernists severely criticized the Formalist approach that aimed to carry the analysis of literature only in terms of close reading, the plot, and textual structure. In modernist literature, symbols, themes, and patterns of depicting the complex human nature gradually become more important than the logical plot or flat one-dimensional characters, preserved from Formalism and Realism. As stated by Susana Onega and Jose Angel Garcia Landa (1996:21), “the modernist revolution had deep consequences for the writing and 4 criticism of all literary genres.” Indeed, in the linguists’ opinion, the new modernist narrative emphasized the role of psychology and the power of human mind that resulted in representation of life through psychological perception that also was reflected in language revolution. The issues mentioned above lead us to the following hypothetical assertion: modern art and fiction thus acquired a new impetus: to portray human mind and consciousness. For instance, in the well-known novel of the modernist writer Virginia Woolf To the Lighthouse, the concept of literary narrative was quite revolutionary, breaking with linearity of the fabula, changeability of the narrative sequence, and concentration on Psychologism that had a formative impact on her novels, influencing both characterization of agents and structural development. The problem statement of this study can be worded in the following question: what are the nature and the peculiarities of this completely new approach to the notions of time, temporality, and space within the novel, the writer’s distinction of the natural, conceptual, and fictional time as well as the alterations of time due to the deictic centre? The interest of field of the investigation covers the use of the notion of temporality in To the Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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