Wordsworth’s Re-Formation of Individuality: "Spots of Time," the Fragment and the Autobiography
Mikyung Park Read a Romantic Fragment Poem,” Literature Compass 5: 1 (2008): 73-89. 2
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Wordsworth s Re formation of Individuali
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Mikyung Park Read a Romantic Fragment Poem,” Literature Compass 5: 1 (2008): 73-89. 2 In his 1784 essay, Kant defines Enlightenment as “man’s emergence from his self-incurred immaturity . Immaturity is the inability to use one’s own understanding without the guidance of another” (54). An individual’s freedom is achievable only with the “public use” of his reason (55); that is, Enlightenment is possible only through an individual’s courage to think inde- pendently and yet predicated upon the collective efforts of mankind to pursue freedom. For Kant, Enlightenment is a task to achieve slowly; he calls his age an “age of enlightenment,” not “an enlightened age” (58). ature derived from a philosophical context in German Romanticism, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and Jean-Luc Nancy remark on the paradoxi- cal but unavoidable characteristic of fragments: “[f]ragmentary totality” at once in the whole and in the part (44). Put differently, while each frag- ment is complete in itself, it never ceases to be a reminder of the whole; totality is “the fragment itself in its completed individuality” (Ibid.). Hence, it is quite relevant to refer to Rodolphe Gaschè’s method of visu- alizing these equivalents: “fragment = system = work = individual” (xii). For the Romantics, the fragment does not preclude “the idea of the sys- tem,” which is “nothing less than the idea of totality” (xi-xii). Regarding the seemingly contradictory equation of the fragment to totality, Gaschè maintains that “fragmentation constitutes the properly Romantic vision of the system”; fragmentation “conceives of the absolute under the form of the individual, of totality as being at the same time finite and plural” (xiii). My essay seeks to argue that Schlegel’s formulation of the fragment is pertinent to our understanding of Wordsworth’s attempt to re-form indi- viduality in two salient “spots of time” passages in Book Twelve of The Prelude (12.208). Wordsworth’s project of writing an autobiography is imposed on matter that is a literary assemblage of fragmented memories. More precisely, by applying the Schlegelian concept of the fragment to the “spots of time,” I try to elucidate the correspondence between Romantic fragmentation and individuality, by utilizing the concept of organic unity as the bridge. In Wordsworth’s re-formation of individuali- ty through and towards a literary form of the autobiography, i.e., writing of “memory or archive of the living,” 3 The Prelude , which still antici- pates The Recluse, is an unfinished poetic incarnation of fragmentation; thus, it points to an eternal aspiration for (as well as a deferral of) the whole, although it achieves wholeness in itself. Both “spots of time” can be read as separate poems and integral parts Wordsworth’s Re-Formation of Individuality: “Spots of Time,” the Fragment and the Autobiography 1367 3 Jacques Derrida, The Animal That Therefore I Am, 47. For Derrida, the genre of autobiography is seductive and “poisonous” precisely because of the possibility of reversing “an immunizing movement” into “auto-immunizing” one: he defines autobiography as “the writing of the self as living, the trace of the living for itself, being for itself, the auto-affection or auto-infection as memory or archive of the living” (47). Earlier than this, Derrida provided his account of autobiographical writing that occurs in all texts: “It is rather para- doxical to think of an autobiography whose signature is entrusted to the other, one who comes along so late and is so unknown. . . . Every text answers to this of the whole, a situation that resonates with Schlegel’s comment: “In poetry too every whole can be a part and every part really a whole” (Critical Fragments 14). “There was a Boy” of The Prelude (1805: V. 389-422) and “Nutting” were intended as a part of that unwritten longer work but were included as separate poems in the 1800 edition of The Download 130.28 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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