THE PAGE.
Updates
August 5, 2024: my thoughts on teaching reading to the grandsons.
The Page
This is the page that is now the official page that will be updated from now on.
In many ways, this is a diary, a journal of my life, but starting in 2000 (or was it 2004?) to the present. The major portion was originally handwritten in various journals and / or typed in word documents between 2000 and 2007, but mostly from 2004 to 2007.
If I were to have the chance to work with Sophia, Levi, and Judah with literature in high school, this would be my rubric, if that's the proper use of the word. I started this page years ago, handwritten in my journals. Probably started in the 2004 - 2007 time period when I was reading voraciously. Unbeknownst to me at the time, I had a pretty good reading program, and pretty much did it on my own.
So, there's a handwritten journal and more than one copy of this page on the blog, but I will use this as the "official" page for my rubric on storytelling.
If I remember, I will date new entries.
Storytelling
Note: this page has just been loaded from the original document. This webpage still needs to be formatted.
The Bible
(section added July 21, 2024)
Epic Sagas
(section added July 21, 2024)
See Icelandic literature. Start here. For more, search Icelandic.
Homer
(section added July 21, 2024)
Search Homer, Odyssey, Iliad.
Robert Graves, The Greek Myths, The Complete Edition.
Greek Dramatists
(section added July 21, 2024)
See The Wooden Horse, multiple links:
- development of the tragedy, first note;
- development of the tragedy, second note;
- summer reading, part 1;
- Book 10, part 2;
- early notes, re-posting;
- Greek tragedy and western philosophy;
- For additional links, search wooden horse
Anglo-Saxon
(section added July 21, 2024)
400 - 1066: Anglo-Saxon: A History Of The Beginnings Of England.
Folk and Classical Literature
(section added July 27, 2024)
Very, very obscure; unnecessary
Began to go down this rabbit hole when I first came across
and began to read The White Goddess
by Robert Graves
literary cycles (mythos)
A literary cycle is a group of stories focused on common figures, often (though not necessarily) based on mythical figures or loosely on historical ones. Cycles which deal with an entire country are sometimes referred to as matters. A fictional cycle is often referred to as a mythos. Matter of Britain, e.g. the Arthurian tales; Matter of France.
The Matter of Britain is the body of medieval literature and legendary material associated with Great Britain and Brittany and the legendary kings and heroes associated with it, particularly King Arthur. The 12th-century Welsh cleric Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae (History of the Kings of Britain), widely popular in its day, is a central component of the Matter of Britain.
Because "myth" is sometimes used in a pejorative sense, some scholars have opted for "mythos" instead. "Mythos" now more commonly refers to its Aristotelian sense as a "plot point" or to a body of interconnected myths or stories, especially those belonging to a particular religious or cultural tradition. It is sometimes used specifically for modern, fictional mythologies, such as the world building of H. P. Lovecraft.
Worldbuilding is the process of constructing an imaginary world or setting, sometimes associated with a fictional universe. Developing the world with coherent qualities such as a history, geography, culture and ecology is a key task for many science fiction or fantasy writers. Worldbuilding often involves the creation of geography, a backstory, flora, fauna, inhabitants, technology and often if writing speculative fiction, different peoples. This may include social customs as well as invented languages for the world.
Howard Phillips Lovecraft (US: August 20, 1890 – March 15, 1937) was an American writer of weird, science, fantasy, and horror fiction. He is best known for his creation of the Cthulhu Mythos.
The Cthulhu Mythos is a mythopoeia and a shared fictional universe, originating in the works of Anglo-American horror writer H. P. Lovecraft. The term was coined by August Derleth, a contemporary correspondent and protégé of Lovecraft, to identify the settings, tropes, and lore that were employed by Lovecraft and his literary successors. The name "Cthulhu" derives from the central creature in Lovecraft's seminal short story "The Call of Cthulhu", first published in the pulp magazine Weird Tales in 1928. Richard L. Tierney, a writer who also wrote Mythos tales, later applied the term "Derleth Mythos" to distinguish Lovecraft's works from Derleth's later stories, which modify key tenets of the Mythos. Authors of Lovecraftian horror in particular frequently use elements of the Cthulhu Mythos.
Lovecraftian horror, also called cosmic horror or eldritch horror, is a subgenre of horror fiction and weird fiction that emphasizes the horror of the unknowable and incomprehensible more than gore or other elements of shock. It is named after American author H. P. Lovecraft (1890–1937). His work emphasizes themes of cosmic dread, forbidden and dangerous knowledge, madness, non-human influences on humanity, religion and superstition, fate and inevitability, and the risks associated with scientific discoveries, which are now associated with Lovecraftian horror as a subgenre. The cosmic themes of Lovecraftian horror can also be found in other media, notably horror films, horror games, and comics.
Lovecraft's work, mostly published in pulp magazines, never had the same sort of influence on literature as his high-modernist literary contemporaries such as Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald. However, his impact is still broadly and deeply felt in some of the most celebrated authors of contemporary fiction. The fantasias of Jorge Luis Borges display a marked resemblance to some of Lovecraft's more dream-influenced work. Borges also dedicated his story, "There Are More Things" to Lovecraft, though he also considered Lovecraft "an involuntary parodist of Poe."
ENGLISH LITERATURE
The "divisions":
- The Beginnings to 1500
- The Renaissance
- The Seventeenth Century
- The Eighteenth Century
- The Romantic Period
- The Pre-Raphaelites: the last phase of the Romantic Period; transitioned to the Victorian
- Victorian
- The Victorian Period (1830 – 1901)
- The Georgian Period (1911 – 1936)
Table of Contents / Index / Subject Matter
(Note:
much of the history of writing below was taken directly from the web.
Do not copy it for publication or school papers; it will easily be
identified as plagiarism.)
Overview: authors (those that have interested me)
- The Brontës
- Jane Austen
- George Eliot
- Ernest Hemingway
- Eugene O’Neill
- Hunter S. Thompson
- Ovid
- T.S. Eliot
- The Romanticists
- Woolf
- Willa Cather
- Edith Wharton
- Chet Raymo, Catholic agnostic
Definitions, Writing, Concepts
Genres
- Epic Sagas, Oral
- Mythology
- Epic Sagas, Written
- Novella
- English Poetry
- Drama
- The Novel
- The Realistic Novel
Seventeenth Century
- Novel
- Daniel Defoe
- The Realistic Novel
Nineteenth Century
- Pre-Raphaelites
- Pre-Victorian
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Victorian Literature
- The French and Russian Novel
- The Gothic Novel
- Romanticism
- The American Novel
- Exile Literature
- Fin de Siècle
- Decadence, Artifice and Aesthetics
Twentieth Century
- The Modernists
- The English Novel
- The American Novel
- American Writers
- The French Novel
- The Russian Novel
- The Mystery Novel
- Naturalism (Emile Zola)
- Kafka
- Graphic Novels
- Gonzo
- Miscellaneous
Poetry: definition
English Eras
Lists
Essays and Other Rambling Thoughts
Books in Apartment (need to link)
Overview: Harold Bloom’s Western Canon.
Authors
1. First, somewhere, I need to find the reference and then recap the progression of storytelling:
a. The Bible: Book of J
b. Oral sagas, poetry: Iliad, Odyssey
c. Sagas, poetry: Beowulf
d. Sagas, prose: Icelandic Sagas
e. Historical, prose: Bede
f. Poetry, English: Chaucer (c. 1343 – 1400), Spenser (1552 – 1599)
i. Chaucer: father of English literature?
ii. Spenser: emigrated to Ireland; premier craftsman - English verse in its infancy
g. Drama, poetry: Shakespeare (1564 – 1616), Goethe (1749 – 1832)
h. Christian allegory: John Bunyan (1628 – 1688)
i. Novels; first one was Don Quixote; then Jane Austen, Thackeray, Brontës
j. Novellas
k. Mysteries: Poe (influenced Symbolism [French] which led to Modernism)
l. Modernism
m. Gonzo journalism: Hunter S. Thompson
n. Graphic Novels
2. Brontës (the first of the 19th century Yorkshire women authors: Brontës, Austen, George Eliot)
a. Much preparation [prepared myself well before reading the Brontës]
b. Re-read Wuthering Heights, Cliff’s Notes, Elizabeth Gaskell’s The Life of Brontë; Jane Eyre, Cliff Notes
c. The 19th Century Female Authors: represents the “renaissance
in female writing, see The Madwoman in the Attic by SM Gilbert and SM
Gubar
d. 1994 biography, The Brontës by Juliet Barker.
Great reference book; should be the last biography of the Brontës –
unless something new in the Brontë archives turns up. The author
suggests that Wuthering Heights follows Rob Roy too closely to be a
coincidence. (April 21, 2007)
3. Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice (I finished Northanger Abbey also in 2006)
4. George Eliot (Mary Anne Evans)
a. Middlemarch
1) This novel is referenced more often than I had noticed
before. This is a very important novel and I highly recommend reading
it as soon as one feels comfortable reading a long, 19th century novel.
5. C. S. Lewis: Collected Letters, Volume I, 1905 - 1931
a. During the Lord of the Rings craze (due to the movies) I came to know of C. S. Lewis, a friend of JRR Tolkien
b. In addition, Laura, my daughter, has been influenced by C. S. Lewis and asked me to read some of his works.
c. So, when I found this volume in “Half-Price Bookstores,”
hardcover, published 2004, I couldn’t believe it. I love letters,
especially before the author is a known entity.
d. C. S.
Lewis had a classical English education and his letters are filled with
references to the classics and to English literature
e.
Interestingly enough, it appears that he was quite absorbed by the
Brontës when he was about 17 years old, and at college. I was reading
this in his letters at the very time I, coincidentally, was enjoying
Brontë, and then Austen, which C. S. Lewis also references.
f. I forget, but I believe I first saw a reference to Spenser in
C. S. Lewis’ Collected Letters. I bought a used copy of Spenser’s
Faerie Queene after reading about it on the net. It will be a challenge
to read this book but it is now on my reading list.
g.
In the minimal research I did on Faerie Queene I came across a book
called Sexual Personae by Camille Paglia that has piqued my interest.
Whether I read this book depends on whether I like it when I thumb
through it at the bookstore. Reviews suggest the first chapter is
excellent but then after that, it may not be so good. [Incidentally, I
do recall coming across this book and glancing through it at one time
while browsing in a bookstore; it was many, many years ago.]
h. During the year 1915 (his collected letters are arranged in
chapters based on the year they were written in), it seems C. S. Lewis
compared much of what he read to the Brontës.
6. Hunter S. Thompson
a. Speaking of letters, I believe The Proud Highway is the first
set of letters I had ever read, and enjoyed them immensely.
b. Prior to my newfound enthusiasm in literature, I had read a
couple of HST’s books and thoroughly enjoyed them (Hell’s Angels comes
to mind); I recently finished his Rum Diary -- it was interesting; it
was HST style, but it didn’t have a plot -- but many other great books
did not have a plot, Joyce’s Ulysses and Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway
come to mind. Ulysses simply covers a day in the life of Stephen Bloom
and Mrs Dalloway simply covers one in the life of Clarissa (?) when she
goes out shopping, preparing for her dinner party that evening, and the
party itself.
7. Ovid’s The Erotic Poems
a. While searching “Half-Price Books” to satisfy my new enthusiasm
for literature, I came across a Penguin edition of this book. It had a
great introduction by Peter Green, who happened to be born in London,
and had had a classical education but ended up at the University of
Texas (Austin) and then the University of Iowa
b. Peter
Green, in that introduction, references much of the literature I am now
familiar with, including Nabokov (see below), Brontë, and Byron (see
below).
c. In the introduction, for example (p. 63):
“No one would deny Ovid’s bookishness. But is it inherently probable
that he was the psychological forerunner of a writer such as Emily
Brontë? His cheerfully pragmatic attitude to sex shows not a trace of
that murky Gothic symbolism which always seems to hang about the
parthenogenetic Heathcliffs of the world.” Had I not read Wuthering
Heights, this reference would not have made any sense.
d. Green goes on to say in his introduction, “Any feeling he may have
retained for human relationships is carefully suppressed, and further
distanced by a battery of recondite allusions. Here one suggestive
modern parallel is T. S. Eliot’s Waste Land, also the work of a bookish
and allusive author, similarly given -- perhaps, again, as a form of
camouflage or self-protection -- to literary quotation and parody.
8. T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land. I had vaguely heard of this book. Seeing a reference in Ovid’s Poems intrigued me, and I looked it up on the net.
a. Some consider The Waste Land the most important poem in the 20th century.
b. The Waste Land was published by Leonard and Virginia Woolf’s Hogarth Press.
9. The Romantics.
While reading a book review by Christopher Hitchens of Lermontov’s A
Hero in Our Time, I realized I couldn’t understand his reference without
a bit of background. Therefore I did a quick review and this is what I
discovered:
a. The three great Romantics are: Percy Shelley, Lord Byron and Keats (or as I call them: shelleybyronandkeats)
b. Shelley and Byron were friends, and traveled in the same circles.
c. Shelley married Mary (daughter of one of the first feminists); she wrote Frankenstein
d. Having read the biographical thumbnail sketches of Shelley and
Byron, I now understand them better. I understand the Byron persona --
at least better than I did at one time.
e. Pushkin,
Russian-Ethiopian (black), took ideas from liberal, revolutionary Russia
and tried to instill them into his Tsarist Russia; he eventually gave
up and supported the Tsar
f. Lermontov took up the mantel,
where Pushkin left off, and subsequently wrote A Hero in Our Time. I
sent that review to Kiri, and learned that not only had she read that
novel in the original Russian, she had to write essays in Russian on the
novel
10. Virginia Woolf
a. The
Bloomsbury Group: very small, but very influential in the literary and
the art world. I know the general public is not aware how important
this group was. Even John Maynard Keynes, the famous British economist,
was part of this group.
b. I think Virginia Woolf might be the most important, certainly the most influential, of the modernists.
c. I think Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway was the feminist’s answer to Joyce’s Ulysses.
It would be a great doctoral thesis, although it has probably already
been done. Virginia Woolf did not like Joyce (too sexist and rough) and
her initial reactions to Ulysses were negative. However, after
the novel’s form and structure were explained to her, she did note that
she re-read it, probably more than once. She was re-reading it at the
very time she was working on Mrs Dalloway. Both Ulysses and Mrs Dalloway
take place in one day (dawn to late evening). And whereas critics have
pointed out how much Joyce described Dublin in that novel, Woolf did
the same in her novel, but London. Joyce loved Dublin, as much as Woolf
loved London. And, of course, the two novels are both very
autobiographical.
d. “Woolf was also a master of a
related literary form called free indirect discourse, in which the
identity of the narrator is not entirely clear. The novel abounds with
dialogue that is not demarcated by quotation marks, as well as phrases
and passages that could easily be spoken or merely thought. This form of
narration is told in the third person, but it conveys a sense of the
character's internal thoughts from the character's own experience,
thereby expressing these thoughts somewhere between a first-person and
third-person mode of narrative.” (Source: http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/titles/lighthouse/fullsumm.html, March 20, 2007)
e. “One of the great innovations of modernist novels is the stream
of consciousness technique, whereby the writer tries to capture a
character's unbroken flow of internal thoughts. Thus an author can
describe the unspoken thoughts and feelings of a character without the
devices of objective narration or dialogue. In To the Lighthouse,
Virginia Woolf makes constant use of this technique, and it is
established as the predominant style from the beginning. In this novel,
the action occurs not in the outside world but in the thoughts and
feelings of the characters as exhibited by the ongoing narrative.
Although there is a narrative voice apart from any of the characters, a
large portion of the narrative consists of the exposition of each
characters' consciousness. Some sections use entire pages without
letting an objective voice interrupt the flow of thoughts of a single
character.
“As a literary device, stream of consciousness
was perhaps the most fitting counterpart to contemporary work being done
by Sigmund Freud regarding the existence and function of the human
unconscious. Freud newly posited the theory that there is a portion of
the mind to which we do not have complete access, with the implication
that we cannot know all of our own thoughts, fears, motivations, and
desires. Writers and artists of this period were intrigued by this
concept, and they sought in various ways to depict and illuminate the
human unconscious. Although stream of consciousness (as its name
implies) is the illumination of thoughts and feelings that characters
consciously experience, Woolf reaches much further into the human mind
than a conventional narrative about the past, providing an intimate view
of a character's interiority.” (Source: http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/titles/lighthouse/fullsumm.html, March 20, 2007)
11. The Poet:
Some years ago, a close friend (Sebastian Vogt), a language
instructor (German and English), and literature teacher, told me he
asked his students to define a poet. I thought about it and couldn’t do
it. So now, whenever I read something that talks about what a poet is,
the subject has special meaning. Elsewhere in this document I provide
definitions of a poet.
[CAVEAT: since this chapter was intended
for personal use only, much of the information is “cut and paste”
directly from internet sources, such as “wiki,” as well as some other
non-internet sources.]
Definitions, Writing, Concepts
Story vs plot, from Virginia Woolf, by Susan Dick, p. xi
The story is what happens
The plot is the “active” interpretative work of discourse on story, “the way the story gets told.”
Evolution of Storytelling
- Epic sagas, oral: poetry
- Epic sagas, written: poetry
- Novella, written: prose
- Drama: poetry
- Novels: prose
Epic Sagas, Oral
Iliad / Odyssey: 6th century B.C.
6th century BC, Homer “dictates” stories to scribe; based on earlier
material possibly dating back to the 8th century BC (two hundred years
earlier)
The Greeks
Keep forgetting the order
of Aristotle, Plato, Socrates? It’s very easy: SPA – Socrates, Plato,
Aristotle.
- Socrates spoke; did not write.
- Plato published (wrote).
- And Aristotle added.
Plato was enamored with Socrates, who was tried,
convicted and executed. Aristotle was Plato’s most famous student.
Aristotle is considered the first scientist.
Plato’s
dialogues: the protagonist was often Socrates. Plato’s dialogues: early,
middle, late. The early dialogues followed Socrates closely, but middle
and later periods, Plato developed his own voice. The Symposium was
written in Plato’s middle period.
Epic Sagas, Written
Beowulf: 1100 A.D.
Written in Old English, about 1100 A.D. Based on exploits of a great
Scandinavian warrior from the 6th century. May and I saw the “animated”
Beowulf epic, November, 2007; excellent movie; the movie was ranked
number 1 for the first couple of weekends. The movie had an interesting
story line: the King of the Geats was the father of Grendel; and
Beowulf was the father of the unnamed dragon (mother of both Grendel and
the dragon, of course, was the woman, who was a beautiful, sexual
being, according to the movie version). Much of the original Beowulf is
missing, and there’s no reason why this story line couldn’t be accurate,
especially given the fact that Beowulf only stated he killed Grendel’s
mother. Whereas he brought back the head of Grendel, he never brought
back the head of his mother. It does make one wonder.
(The Icelandic Sagas: 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries; anomalous for their times)
Novella
The Decameron: 1353
http://www.bartleby.com/61/81/N0178100.html.
A
novella is a short, narrative, prose fiction work. Like the English
word “novel,” the English word “novella” derives from the Italian word
“novella” (plural: “novelle”), for a tale, a piece of news. As the
etymology suggests, novellas originally were news of town and country
life worth repeating for amusement and edification.
As a literary
genre, the novella’s origin lay in the early Renaissance literary work
of the Italians and the French. Principally, by Giovanni Boccaccio
(1313 - 1375), author of The Decameron (1353) -- one hundred novellae
told by ten people, seven women and three men, fleeing the Black Death
by escaping from Florence to the Fiesole hills, in 1348; and by the
French Queen, Marguerite de Navarre (1492 - 1549), [aka Marguerite de
Valois], author of Heptameron (1559) -- seventy-two original French
tales (structured like The Decameron). Her psychological acuity and
didactic purpose outweigh the unfinished collection’s weak literary
style.
Not until the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centuries
did writers fashion the novella into a literary genre structured by
precepts and rules. Contemporaneously, the Germans were the most active
writers of the Novelle (German: “novella”; plural: “novellen”). For
the German writer, a novella is a fictional narrative of indeterminate
length -- a few pages to hundreds --restricted to a single, suspenseful
event, situation, or conflict leading to an unexpected turning point
(Wendepunkt), provoking a logical, but surprising end; Novellen tend to
contain a concrete symbol, which is the narration’s steady point.
In
the German, the English word novella is novelle, and the English word
novel is the German roman, this etymological distinction avoids
confusion of the literatures and the forms, with the novel being the
more important, established fictional form. The Austrian writer Stefan
Zweig’s (1881 - 1942), Die Schachnovelle (1942) [The Check Novel], translated (1944) as The Royal Game, is an example of a title naming its genre.
In
English, a novella is a story midway -- in length (30 - 40,000 words)
and structural complexity -- between a short story (500 - 15,000 words)
and a novel (60,000 words, minimum). A novella focuses upon a single
chain of events with a psychologically surprising turning point, e.g.,
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886), by Robert Louis
Stevenson (1850 - 94); and Heart of Darkness (1902) by Joseph Conrad
(1857 - 1924).
Commonly, longer novellas are addressed as novels;
though incorrectly, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Heart of Darkness are
called novels, as are many science fiction works such as War of the
Worlds and Armageddon 2419 A.D. Occasionally, longer works are
addressed as novellas, with some academics positing 100,000 words as the
novella-novel threshold. In the science fiction genre, the Hugo and
Nebula literary awards define the novella as “A ... story of between
seventeen thousand, five hundred (17,500) and forty thousand (40,000)
words.”
HOWEVER: there is a nice discussion of “novella” in the introduction to the Wordsworth edition of Edith Wharton’s Ethan Frome:
How to classify the book remains a problems. Wharton herself referred to Ethan Frome as a ‘tale,’ a story,’ a ‘novel,’ a ‘short nove,’ and, in Henry James’s expression, a ‘nouvelle’; and the book is listed in indexes roday under similarly diverse categories. For many critics now, however, ‘nouvelle’ (or ‘nouvella’) seems a belittling term; and when applied to fiction by a woman writer, it might seem to suggest a product less robust and significant than the work of her fellow male artists. Katherine Anne Porter forcefully dismissed the word, enjoining her own readers in 1965:Nevertheless, especially when used in its period context, ‘novella’ describes a literary form with a rich history. Many of the most commanding works of Wharton’s contemporaries among them, Conrad, James, Lawrence, Harding, Davis, Chopin, Gilman) are novellas, and Wharton herself had already successfully attempted the form in some of her most powerful early fictions….
[Please do not call my short novels Novelettes, or even worse, Novella. Novelette is classical usage for a trivial, dime-novel sort of thing; Novella is a slack, boneless, affected word that we do not need to describe anything. Please call my works by their right names: we have four that cover every division: short stories, long stories, short novels, novels.]
English Poetry
Edmund Spenser (1552 – 1599):
The Fairie Queene, 1590
Very, very important, according to Camille Paglia in Sexual Personae
Top quoted poets:
Shakespeare, Tennyson, Pope (in that order)
English Poets
Spenser (1552 – 1599)
Shakespeare, William (1564 – 1616):
Major contemporary poets [their age when Shakespeare was 30]
Edmund Spenser, 1552 – 1599 [42]
Sir Philip Sidney, 1554 – 1586 [40]
John Donne, 1572 – 1631 [22] – works not published until 1633
Ben Jonson, 1572 – 1637 [22]
When you think sonnets (little songs), think Shakespeare, Donne and Jonson
Donne: very convoluted
Jonson: very simple
Tennyson, Alfred (1809 – 1892): a number of phrases now commonplace in English language
“nature, red in tooth and claw”
“better to have loved and lost”
“Theirs not to reason why, / Theirs but to do and die”
“My strength is as the strength of ten, / Because my heart is pure.”
Pope, Alexander (1688 – 1744): greatest English poet of the early 18th
century; best known for his satirical verse and his translation of
Homer; a master of the heroic couplet (iambic pentameter, masculine
verse)
Emily Brontë (1818 – 1848)
From Reading the Brontës: An Introduction to Their Novels and Poetry,
by Charmian Knight and Luke Spencer: “As well as my selection of
Emily’s poems, there is another poem here for you to read. It is by
Sylvia Plath, the American poet who spent some of her short life (like
Emily, she died at thirty – suicide, perhaps accidental) in the West
Riding of Yorkshire and was buried there in 1963. Caleld ‘Wuthering
Heights,’ it registers Plath’s strong response to the moorland
surroundings of Haworth and can serve as an introduction to the themes
and images of Emily’s poetry which I want to consider.” Earlier, Luke
Spencer wrote: “Emily Brontë’s poetry is generally regarded as some of
the finest written in the 19th century and at least the equal of
anything produced by other women poets of that period, like Elizabeth
Barrett Browning and Christina Rossetti.”
Drama
Shakespeare: 1564 – 1616
The “five-act tragedy” and sonnets.
Shakespeare
was writing at a time when Modern English was still in its early
stages. According to wiki.com:
Modern English developed with the Great Vowel Shift that began in 15th-century England, and continues to adopt foreign words from a variety of languages, as well as coining new words. The Great Vowel Shift was a major change in the pronunciation of the English language that took place in the south of England between 1450 and 1750.The Great Vowel Shift was first studied by Otto Jespersen (1860–1943), a Danish linguist and Anglicist, who coined the term. Shakespeare wrote in the late 1590’s and early 1600’s, literally right during the Great Vowel Shift. The values of the long vowels form the main difference between the pronunciation of Middle English and Modern English, and the Great Vowel Shift is one of the historical events marking the separation of Middle and Modern English. Originally, these vowels had "continental" values much like those remaining in Italian and liturgical Latin. However, during the Great Vowel Shift, the two highest long vowels became diphthongs, and the other five underwent an increase in tongue height with one of them coming to the front.
The Novel
Don Quixote: 1605
The novel: a merging of realistic and the romantic, the mimetic (the
imitative) and the fantastic (http://www.answers.com/novel).
The realistic and romantic tendencies converge in Cervantes’s Don
Quixote de la Mancha (1605, 1615), which describes the adventures of an
aging country gentleman who, inspired by chivalric romances, sets out to
do good in an ugly world. A brilliant, humanistic study of illusion
and reality, Don Quixote is considered by many critics to be the most
important single progenitor of the novel.
Virginia Woolf
comments at some length on Cervantes / Don Quixote in her diary, see
Thursday, August, 5, 1920, A Writer’s Diary, published in 1953, and
edited by her husband Leonard.
Daniel DeFoe: b. 1660; five novels, 1719 – 1722 — Father Of The English Novel
Remember: Sir Walter Scott is customarily hailed as “the father of the
historical novel. Defoe’s place in its development is often slighted
when not ignored. Scott was fond of Defoe’s work and felt that Defoe
“would have deserved immortality for the genius he has displayed in A
Journal of the Plague Years as well as in the Memoirs of a Cavalier,”
even if he had not given the world Robinson Crusoe.” – John J. Burke,
Jr., in Daniel Defoe, Modern Critical Views, 1987 (edited by Harold
Bloom).
Several 18th century novels, each essentially
realistic (wow, until November 12, 2017, I had never paid attention to
that word, “realistic.” (see my entry dated November 12, 2017), has at
one time or another been designated the first novel in English. Daniel
Defoe is famous for Robinson Crusoe (1719), a detailed and convincingly
realistic account, based on a real event, of the successful efforts of
an island castaway to survive. Also in this realistic tradition is
Defoe’s novel Moll Flanders (1722), which relates the picaresque
adventures of a good-natured harlot and thief. Defoe is considered by
some to be the first journalist. According to “inventors.about.com”
(http://inventors.about.com/od/pstartinventions/a/printing_4.htm) Daniel
Defoe published The Review in 1704, making him the first journalist.
There were older newspapers and therefore older contributors to these
newspapers, but it is possible that the website considers Defoe’s
articles leading the way to the modern newspaper.
Samuel Richardson, 1689 – 1761; Pamela (1740); Clarissa (1748) and Pamela
Laurence
Sterne, 1713 - 1768, Tristram Shandy, nine volumes, 1759 – 1767. A
must-read is the Everyman’s Library edition, with an introduction by
Peter Conrad, c. 1991, but included in Everyman’s Library as early as
1912. In the introduction, these four novelists were, perhaps, the
“founding fathers” of the English novel: Defoe, Richardson, and Sterne,
and Cervantes, though not English. Mentioned in passing in the
introduction: Marianne Moore, Jane Eyre, Don Juan (Byron), Hamlet,
Whitman’s Prelude, and many others, particularly Fielding’s Tom Jones.
From page viii of the introduction, “… Sterne discovers a new way of
writing and a new way of understanding human nature which makes his book
a sacred text both for Romantic poets and modern novelists, who like
him want to liberate literature from its self-imposed and unnecessary
rules.”
Note: Benjamin Franklin opined that “John
Bunyan was the first to mix narration and dialogue, a method very
engaging to the reader…” and went on to say that Daniel Defoe did the
same, as did Samuel Richardson (1689-1761).
The Seventeenth Century
Dechristianizing
Scientific Revolution: children of Francis Bacon and Galileo
Generally dated to have begun 1543: Copernicus – On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres
The idea of progress pretty much an invention of 17th century Europe – Raymo, 2008
1637: Descartes publishes Discourse on the Method
Stands at dividing line between medieval and modern
Some say the Enlightenment began with Discourse on the Method
Generally, the Enlightenment is said to have begin in the 18th century
It ended with the French Revolution according to many historians
Modernity / rationalism allowed thoughts of sexual equality, sexual freedom
- Philosophers now starting to hold sway; they held sway in 17th and 18th centuries
- “Dechristianizing” became an official component of the modernizing program of the French Revolution (1789 – 1799).
The Eighteenth Century
Romanticism
The Romantic Period perhaps overlaps exactly the life of Goethe, born in 1749 and died in 1832. Perhaps: Goethe, Victor Hugo, Delacroix are most important.
Samuel Richardson (1689 - 1761); major English, 18th century writer, best known for his three epistolary novels: Pamela: Or, Virtue Rewarded; Clarissa: Or the History of a Young Lady; and, Sir Charles Grandison. (I opined that Virginia Woolf chose to name Mrs Dalloway after Richardson’s Clarissa.) Pamela became the first novel printed in America when Benjamin Franklin reprinted it from the fourth London edition! – p. 18. (1742 – 1744 edition)
In England, the Bluestocking phenomenon was, perhaps, the catalyst
that stimulated some of the great women writers of the 18th, 19th and
20th centuries. For background,
see:
http://www.npg.org.uk/live/wobrilliantwomen1.asp.
It is a difficult book to read, but The Journal of Eugene Delacroix,
edited by Hubert Wellington, c. 1951, 1995, Phaidon Press, is quite
interesting. It is said that the height of Romantic literature was in
1830 with Victor Hugo’s play Hernani.
The Gothic Novel
Ann Radcliffe, 1764 – 1823, English author; considered a pioneer of
the gothic novel. Mysteries of Udolpho Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey
and also referenced in Henry James’s The Turn of the Screw. Also
influenced Sir Walter Scott.
Transition to Romanticism
Remember: Goethe -- 1749 – 1832
“They (Samuel Johnson and Boswell) first met in the back parlour of Tom Davies’s bookshop on the afternoon of Monday, 16 May 1763. Johnson was born in 1709, so Johnson was 54 and Boswell was 24. If Johnson had been born in 1680 and Boswell in 1710, the difference between them would merely have been the difference between youth and middle age; but since Johnson’s birth date was 1709 and Boswell’s 1740 they are separated by one of those seismic cracks in the historical surface.
Boswell is a new man in Johnson’s world; he belongs to the epoch of Rousseau (Romanticism); whereas Johnson was still classical; all the attitudes that we associate with the end of the eighteenth century – the onset of ‘sensibility,’ the obsession with the individual and the curious, the swelling tide of subjective emotion – are strongly present in him.
Where Johnson still belongs to the world of Aristotle and Aquinas, the world of the giant system-builders, Boswell inhabits the ruins of that world. Where Johnson instinctively proceeds by erecting a framework and then judging the particular instance in relation to that framework, Boswell is the sniffing bloodhound who will follow the scent of individuality into whatever territory it leads him. The fascination of their dialogue, that dialogue of mind, heart and voice round which Boswell organized his great Life, is that is it not merely between two very different men but between two epochs. In its pages, Romantic Europe speaks to Renaissance Europe, and is answered.”
– Samuel Johnson, A Biography, John Wain, p. 229 – 230.
Romanticism
The period of Romanticism: 1749 – 1832.
Bookends:
- Rosseau’s essay: 1749
- Death of Goethe: 1832
The big four:
- France – Rousseau
- Germany – Goethe
- England – Wordsworth and Coleridge
Romantics:
Rousseau, Goethe, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William
Blake, J.M.W. Turner, John Constable, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley,
Mary Shelley, John Keats. William Butler Yeats, born in 1865, referred
to his generation as “the last romantics.” In France: painters Theodore
Gericault, Eugene Delacroix; authors Victor Hugo and Stendhal; the
composer Hector Berlioz. In Russia: Alexander Pushkin, Mikhail
Lermontov (influenced Lord Byron); the poet Fyodor Tyutchev.
The
French writer Rousseau is considered the father of the Romantic
Movement, following his essay published in 1749, as part of a contest to
answer the question: “Had the advance of the sciences and arts helped
to destroy or purify moral standards?” For quick review of these
advances, see notes on philosophy. (At that file, scroll down to
Chapter 3, “Brave New World.”)
It is interesting to note that
Rousseau’s landmark essay was published in 1749, the year Goethe was
born. By the time of Goethe’s death, writing was moving toward the
“Modernist” era. One man, Goethe, can be said to have spanned the exact
era of the Romantic Movement.
The Romantic Period perhaps overlaps exactly the life of Goethe, born in 1749 and died in 1832.
Williams
Wordsworth (1770 – 1850) was a major English romantic poet who, with
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped launch the Romantic Age in English
literature with their 1798 joint publication, Lyrical Ballads.
(Note:
Romanticism was probably a reaction to scientific advances that had
occurred between the late 13th century and the 17th century. We now
refer to that period as the Renaissance. From wiki: “It was not until
the 19th century that the French word Renaissance achieved popularity in
describing the cultural movement that began in the late 13th century.
The Renaissance was first defined by French historian Jules Michelet
(1798 - 1874), in his 1855 work, Histoire de France. For Michelet, the
Renaissance was more a development in science than in art and culture.
He asserted that is spanned the period from Columbus to Copernicus to
Galileo; that is, from the end of the 15th century to the middle of the
17th century.” Others had their own definitions.)
More on Goethe: From The New Yorker, February 1, 2016, “Design for Living: What’s great about Goethe?” by Adam Kirsch.
“English
speakers are more hospitable to fiction in translation, and yet when
was the last time you heard someone mention “Wilhelm Meister’s
Apprenticeship” or “Elective Affinities,” Goethe’s long fictions? These
books have a good claim to have founded two of the major genres of the
modern novel—respectively, the Bildungsroman and the novel of adultery.
Goethe’s first novel, “The Sorrows of Young Werther,” is better known,
mainly because it represented such an enormous milestone in literary
history; the first German international best-seller, it is said to have
started a craze for suicide among young people emulating its hero. But
in English it remains a book more famous than read.”
Pre-Raphaelites
The last phase (of the Romantic era) of transformation into Victorian culture.
See my Commonplace Notes.
I think I read somewhere the Pre-Raphaelite phase lasted only five (5) years – that needs to be confirmed.
The Realistic Novel
From
John Wain’s biography of Samuel Johnson: “As a critic Johnson was
always rather unresponsive to the realistic novel, the most important
new form to arise in his lifetime.” – Samuel Johnson, A Biography, John
Wain, p. 203
The Nineteenth Century
High Point In British Literature
Novel became the leading form of literature in English in the 19th century.
19th century often regarded as a high point in British literature.
Popular works opened a market for the novel among the reading public.
Pre-Victorian authors: Jane Austen, Walter Scott (both perfected closely-observed social satire and adventure stories.
Edgar
Allan Poe (1809 – 1849) was the first American author to attempt to
make his living solely by writing. He was the inventor of the detective
novel and his genre was gothic.
There are numerous sub-categories of novel:
- the realistic novel
- the Bildungsroman (Goethe: Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship)
- the novel of adultery (Goethe: Elective Affinities)
Early 19th Century
The “Strange Pause”
1820s and 1830s
The “strange” pause coined by the historian G.M. Young:
- fell between the Romantics and the Victorians
- modern scholars unsure what happened during this troublesome transition phase between the deaths of shelleybyronandkeats and the rise of Dickens
- personality, novelist, poetess: Leticia Elizabeth Landon (LEL)
Early 19th Century
Pre-Victorian
Sir Walter Scott: Waverley, 1814; Rob Roy
Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice, 1813; Emma, 1816
The
novel became the dominant form of Western literature in the 19th
century, which produced many works that are considered milestones in the
development of the form.
Sir Walter Scott is considered the
father of the 19th century novel and the historical novel. [Remember,
Defoe might be considered the father of the English novel, but if so,
with his Journal of the Plague Year and Memoirs of a Cavalier, he might
contend with Sir Walter Scott as the father of the historical novel.]
To date, the only Scott novel I have read is Rob Roy, published the last day of 1817, although the author’s “copyright” is 1818. I really enjoyed Rob Roy,
perhaps because I had spent so much time between 2002 and 2004 in
northern England (Yorkshire) just south of Scotland, and where much of
action in Rob Roy probably took place.
Juliet Barker, in her 1994 biography of The Brontës suggests that Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights follows Rob Roy to be a coincidence.
“Modern” readers may prefer other Scott novels, but Robert Lewis Stevenson considered Rob Roy “the best of Sir Walter’s by nearly as much as Sir Walter is the best of novelists.”
See also Sir Walter Scott in How the Scots Invented the Modern World.
19th Century
Victorian
Victorian Literature
Victoria literature period
- 1830 – 1901
- as defined by The Norton Anthology, English Literature;
- followed Romanticism
Queen Victoria (1819 – 1901) reign: 1837 – 1901
- Victorian Age: Industrial Revolution (social, economic, technology change)
- Expansion of the British Empire; became the foremost Global Power of the time
- Almost entirely of German descent
- Last British monarch of the House of Hanover,
Qualities associated with Victorianism: earnestness, moral responsibility, domestic propriety.
Victorian literature: link between Romantic Period and 20th century literature.
Notable
Victorian authors -- wow, wow, wow -- what an incredible list of authors --
Brontë sisters, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Lewis Carroll, Wilkie Collins, Charles
Dickens, Benjamin Disraeli, George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell, George
Gissing, Thomas Hardy, A. E. Housman, Rudyard Kipling, Robert Louis
Stevenson, Bram Stoker (Dracula), Philip Meadows Taylor, Lord Alfred
Tennyson, William Thackeray, Anthony Trollope, and Oscar Wilde.
William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair, 1847 - 1848
Thomas Hardy (1840 - 1920), the Wessex poems and Wessex novels
In Britain, Sir Walter Scott’s Waverley (1814), about the 1745 Jacobite uprising in support of Charles Edward Stuart, inaugurated the historical novel.
The serialization of novels in various periodicals brought the form an ever-expanding audience. Particularly popular were the works of Charles Dickens, including Oliver Twist (1839) and David Copperfield (1850). Readers were drawn by Dickens’s sympathetic, melodramatic, and humorous delineation of a world peopled with characters of all social classes, and by his condemnation of various social abuses. Further portraits of English society appear in Anthony Trollope’s Barsetshire novels, which scrutinize clerical life in a small, rural town, and George Eliot’s Silas Marner (1861) and Middlemarch (1871 - 72), which treat the lives of ordinary people in provincial towns with humanity and a strong moral sense. George Meredith’s Ordeal of Richard Feverel (1859) and The Egoist (1879) are analytical tragicomedies set in high social circles. The conflict between man and nature is stressed in Thomas Hardy’s Return of the Native (1878) and Tess of the D’Urbervilles (1891).
Although the great English novels of the 19th century were predominantly realistic, novels of fantasy and romance formed a literary undercurrent. Early in the century Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) explores a tale of horror. Later, Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre (1847) and Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) each present imaginative, passionate visions of human love. The Brontës wrote a total of seven published novels.
Robert Louis Stevenson revived the adventure tale and the horror story in Treasure Island (1883) and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886). At the beginning of the 20th century, horror and adventure were combined in the novels of Joseph Conrad, notably Lord Jim (1900) and Heart of Darkness (1902), both works achieving high levels of stylistic and psychological sophistication.
Thomas Hardy advanced issues of sexuality; particularly notable was pioneer description of lesbianism in his first published novel, Desperate Reviews.
Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800 – 1859), historian, loved the changes. Melancholy poet Matthew Arnold felt all the change in the Victorian period exhausted man. From The Norton Anthology, English Literature, Volume E, The Victorians:
Although many Victorians shared a sense of satisfaction in the industrial and political preeminence of England during the period, they also suffered from an anxious sense of something lost, a sense too of being displaced persons in a world made alien by technological changes that had been exploited too quickly for the adaptive powers of the humane psyche.Began in the late 18th century; extended into modern times)Gothic Horror Novel
Dracula, Bram Stoker
some key dates:
Bram Stoker, Irish writer, 1847 - 1912
Oscar Wilde, Irish playwright, 1854 - 1900
Dracula published: 1897Émigré Literature
This is a minor fork down the road of storytelling but I stumbled across it in Judith Thurman’s biography of Isak Dinesen. From page 260: “As a young woman starting out in life, Tanne Dinesen had been caught in a typically Romantic predicament. She was estranged from the values and milieu of her family; her inner life was at odds with her reality, and she felt cheated of that intensity which comes when one’s desire and experience are not in conflict. Her struggle for a passionate life between the ages of ten and seventeen – a struggle to ‘become herself’ – bears a close resemblance to the struggle of a whole generation of poets and artists who had grown up at the close of the eighteenth century, entered adolescence with Napoleon, believed his promises and in his example, and were left stranded in the 1820s feeling rootless, powerless, and betrayed. They took refuge from their disappointment in nostalgia for the past, in dreams of adventure and rebellion, in eccentricity and fantastic stories, in opium, in the cult of the personality or in the forests of America, and they created what Georg Brandes called an émigré literature. Some of them were actually émigrés from the ancien régime, and some were spiritual émigrés from their own disillusionment.
“Their sense that society did not offer adequate scope for their desire and potential – for their humanity – split them and their work, and set the pattern for an entire century. Each successive generation of artists, from Lamartine to Ibsen, took a course it believed was necessary or virtuous or noble or inevitable, and also lamented: the sacrifice of ‘life’ for ‘art.’” See also exile literature elsewhere in this document.
19th Century
US: Transcendentalism (need to flesh out; complete this section)
A
quick short book with an overview of Transcendentalism: American
Bloomsbury, Susan Cheever, c. 2007: Emerson, Thoreau, the Alcotts,
Margaret Fuller, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne; peripherally
the Peabody Sisters
1830’s: Concord, Massachusetts
- Emerson
- Margaret Fuller
- Peabody Sisters
- Henry David Thoreau
- Branson Alcott, Louisa May Alcott: Little Women; Elizabeth was “Beth” in Little Women
- Elizabeth Peabody Alcott: transcendentalism
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
First American memoir and nature writing in one stroke: H. D. Thoreau, Walden
Memoir writing: Nathaniel Hawthorne
Transcendentalism: we are born believers vs Calvin
Calvin: we are born sinners
Massachusetts: Boston, Salem, Concord
Peabody Sisters
Mary
Sophia - married Nathaniel Hawthorne
Elizabeth
Transcendentalism: Elizabeth Peabody’s Record of a School
Bronson Alcott daughters
Anna Alcott:
Louisa May Alcott: Little Women (Elizabeth was “Beth” in Little Women)
Elizabeth Peabody Alcott: is she the daughter of Elizabeth Peabody-Bronson Alcott?
Record of a School: based on Bronson Alcott’s school
Wordsworth requested a copy
Herman
Melville: established writer; well received; 15 years younger than
Hawthorne; halfway through Moby-Dick (The Whale), Melville reads House
of Seven Gables and Scarlet Letter (one or both, can’t remember); very
disturbed by Hawthorne’s “darkness.” Around chapter 23 (according to
Carol Oates), Melville changes writing style completely in Moby-Dick.
The critics hated the book; the public hated the book, and Melville
“destroyed.” Destroyed by Hawthorne — according to Carol Oates and Susan Cheever.
The French and Russian Novels
Major
19th-century French writers also produced novels in the romantic and
realistic traditions. Romance can be found in Alexandre Dumas’s Three Musketeers (1844) and Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables (1844), both of which are melodramatic and swashbuckling, terrifying and poignant. Honore de Balzac’s Human Comedy
(1829 - 47), on the other hand, is a series of novels that offer a
realistic, if cynical, panorama of life in Paris and the provinces.
In
the 19th century Russian novelists quickly gained world reputations for
their powerful statements of human and cosmic problems. If Leo
Tolstoy’s War and Peace (published in installments, 1865 - 69) is a God-centered novel, Feodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment (1866) can be considered a God-haunted one.
The American Novel
American
novels in the 19th century were explicitly referred to as romances.
James Fenimore Cooper’s historical novel The Last of the Mohicans
(1826), Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter (1850), and Herman
Melville’s Moby-Dick (1851) -- the latter two heavily allegorical and
containing supernatural elements -- properly belong in this category.
In the last decades of the century, however, a shift toward realism
occurred. Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1883), a revival
of the picaresque novel, is romantic in its Mississippi River setting
but realistic in its satirical attack on religious hypocrisy and racial
persecution. [See twentieth century for Edith Wharton, the first woman
to win the Pulitzer Prize for literature.]
Great American Novel,
definition: The "Great American Novel" is the concept of a novel that
most perfectly represents the spirit of life in the United States at the
time of its publication. It is presumed to be written by an American
author who is knowledgeable about the state, culture, and perspective of
the common American citizen. It is often considered as the American
response to the tradition of the national epic. (Huckleberry Finn is
considered one of the first Great American Novels.)
Exile Literature
Dante, Conrad, Naboko, and countless others
Jewish Diaspora; Survival in Auschwitz, Primo Levi
The German Jews, from 1939 onward represent largest source of exile literature
According to Judith Thurman in her biography of Isak Dinesen describes
émigré literature which sounds similar to exile literature. See émigré
literature elsewhere in this document.
I wonder if Brick Lane, by Monica Ali, elsewhere on this page, might be seen as a form of exile literature?
Fin de Siècle
Decadence, Artifice and Aesthetics
From
wiki: “In literature, the Decadent movement—late nineteenth century
fin de siècle writers who were associated with Symbolism or the
Aesthetic movement—was first given its name by hostile critics, and then
the name was triumphantly adopted by some writers themselves. These
"decadents" relished artifice over the earlier Romantics' naive view of
nature (see Jean-Jacques Rousseau). Some of these writers were
influenced by the tradition of the Gothic novel and by the poetry and
fiction of Edgar Allan Poe.
Oscar Wilde gave a curious
definition: "Classicism is the subordination of the parts to the whole;
decadence is the subordination of the whole to the parts." By this
definition, Charles Dickens would qualify as decadent, [citation needed]
because his "minor" characters often obscure the "major" ones—or at
least are more interesting than them. For example, consider Mrs Sarah
Gamp in Martin Chuzzlewitt.”
From the web: “Artifice implies
both art and agency, rather than "artificiality" as the opposite of the
natural. As aesthesis, art includes modes of making, doing, and seeing.
Artifice, when understood as art as well as acting or performing, calls
attention to the possibilities of inventing and imagining new forms of
life through the intertwinement of the aesthetic and the political.
Encompassing the imaginative, the technological, the theoretical, and
the artistic, artifice as a term emphasizes the politics of art and the
art of politics in the invention of life forms, both individual and
collective.”
From wiki: “From the late 17th to the early 20th
century Western aesthetics underwent a slow revolution into what is
often called modernism. German and British thinkers emphasized beauty as
the key component of art and of the aesthetic experience, and saw art
as necessarily aiming at beauty.
Nineteenth Century Womanhood
Great
French and Russian portrayals of anguished, transgressing 19th century
womanhood, Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1856) and Tolstoy's Anna Karenina
(1877), but few know the German entry in this field, Theodor Fontane's
Effi Briest, a dry, quiet little masterpiece.
-- Derbyshire, Unknown
Quantity, p. 235
The Twentieth Century
Edith Wharton
E.M. Forster, Howard’s End, 1910
D.H. Lawrence, Sons and Lovers, 1913
James Joyce, Ulysses, 1922
F. Scot Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, 1925
Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises, 1926; For Whom the Bell Tolls, 1940
William Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury, 1929
J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye,
Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer, 1934
Anaïs Nin, House of Incest, 1936; Winter of Artifice, 1939
The Twentieth Century: The English Novel
The Georgian Period
1911 - 1936
World War I and its attendant disillusionment with 19th-century values
radically altered the nature of the novel. In search of greater
freedom of expression in English writers like E. M. Forster in Howard’s
End (1910), D. H. Lawrence in Sons and Lovers (1913), and James Joyce in
Ulysses (1922) described more explicitly than ever before the conflict
between human intellect and human sexuality. Joyce, along with Dorothy
Richardson in Pilgrimage (1915 - 38) and Virginia Woolf in Mrs. Dalloway
(1925) and To The Lighthouse (1927), carried Freud’s discovery of the
unconscious into art by attempting to portray human thought and emotion
through the stream of consciousness technique.
Virginia Woolf, January 25, 1882 – March 28, 1941:
Her novels directly challenged the Bildungsroman
James Joyce, February 2, 1882 – January 13, 1941:
D.H. Lawrence, 1885 – 1930:
Lytton Strachey introduced a new way of biography with The Eminent Victorians
The Twentieth Century: The American Novel
In the United States the profound postwar (WWI) dislocation of values
is evident in such novels as The Great Gatsby (1925), by F. Scott
Fitzgerald, about a romantic bootlegger whose version of the American
dream of success is shattered by a corrupt reality; The Sun Also Rises
(1926), by Ernest Hemingway, concerning a group of disillusioned
expatriates in Europe who find meaning only in immediate physical
experience; and The Sound and the Fury (1929), by William Faulkner,
about the disintegration of a once-proud Southern family.
Note: Hemingway completed The Sun Also Rises in six weeks, writing at
his favorite restaurant in Montparnasse, La Closerie des Lilas.
For now, I will place Henry Miller in this category; I don’t know
where else to put him. Having read Tropic of Cancer (published 1934) it
appears that it was writers like Henry Miller that paved the way for
modern American novels and the 20th century movies in which frank
language could be used. It took someone to be the first with such frank
language – language considered to be pornographic by many – but in
Tropic of Cancer, Miller was describing things as they really were, and
using language that he really used. He truly broke new ground, as far as
I know. One may argue that Henry Miller’s success was tied directly to
encouragement from Anaïs Nin.
Edith Wharton: Edith Newbold
Jones – “keeping up with the Joneses.” When you get into your Edith
Wharton stage, consider skimming Hermione Lee’s very long biography of
Edith Wharton, then read Ethan Frome, and then read her autobiography, A
Backward Glance.
[2019] From Maureen Corrigan’s So We Read On: How The Great Gatsby Came To Be And Why It Endures:
I think Fitzgerald absorbed the techniques and the attitude of the
emerging genre of hard-boiled fiction while he was intermittently living
in and close to New York City from the late winter of 1919 to the
spring of 1924. So much of the sturdy fabric of Gatsby — the criminal
underworld, the tough-guy lingo, the obsession with the past, the
violence, the doom-laden sense of fated-ness, the voice-over narration,
the death by drowning — were staples of the hard-boiled tales,
including the Alan Ladd Gatsby of 1949. The hard-boiled element in The Great Gatsby accounts for some of the dark magic of this very strange and un-American Great American Novel.
American Writers of the 20th Century
Hunter S. Thompson, in Hell’s Angels mentioned Nelson Algren.
Nelson Algren, 1950’s writer: “Novelist and reporter, poet and social
conscience through fifty years of drastic change in America, including
changes in literary fashion, Algren repeatedly located himself among
those who have stood up for the accused and the down-and-out: a
tradition in American literature that he saw extending from Walt Whitman
and Herman Melville through Stephen Crane, Sherwood Anderson, Theodore
Dreiser, and Eugene O’Neill to Richard Wright, Jack Conroy and himself
[this list should include Joseph Conrad and Graham Greene, and later,
Hunter S. Thompson]. Insofar as he was a Chicago writer, Algren took
his place among a group of socially concerned writers that included
Frank Norris, Upton Sinclair, James T. Farrell, Vachel Lindsay, Carl
Sandburg, Edgar Lee Masters, and Edna St. Vincent Millay.” [The “St.”
in Edna’s name stands for Stephen.]
The Twentieth Century: The French Novel
The greatest masterpiece of the 20th-century novel in France is widely
acknowledged to be Marcel Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past (1913 -
27), a monumental work in seven parts that is at once an inquiry into
the meaning of experience, a study of the development of an artist, and a
detailed portrait of life within a particular segment of French
society. Also important are Jean-Paul Sartre’s Nausea (1938) and Albert
Camus’s The Stranger (1942), both fictional explications of
existentialism. In the late 1950s there appeared in France the
so-called new novel, in which traditional elements such as plot,
characterization, and rational ordering of time and space are abandoned
and replaced by flashbacks, slow motion, magnification of objects, and a
scenario format, all of which produce a mutant -- the novel influenced
by films. New novelists include Michel Butor, Alain Robbe-Grillet,
Marguerite Duras, and Nathalie Sarraute.
The Twentieth Century: The Russian Novel
After 1917 Russian Revolution, much of the country’s literature
reflected Marxist ideology. Maxim Gorky was the leading exponent of
social realism. In 1933, Ivan Bunin became the first Russian to be
awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. The novel in the Soviet Union
either avoided offending the Communist party or, by reflecting a
dissenting outlook, avoided publication in the USS. Mikhail Sholokhov’s
epic series about the Don Cossacks, including And Quiet Flows the Don
(1934), met the first qualification; Boris Pasternak’s Dr. Zhivago
(1957), about life in Russia from 1903 to 1929, and Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn’s Cancer Ward (1968) and First Circle (1968), both
realistic, powerful accounts of life under Stalin’s regime, met the
second and were published outside the Soviet Union.
The Twentieth Century: The Mystery
The origin of the mystery is uncertain, but it can be traced back to
ancient times. As long as there has been crime, there has been mystery:
http://library.thinkquest.org/J002344/History.html
The very
first mystery / detective story was published in 1841 by Edgar Allan
Poe. The title of his book was The Murders in the Rue Morgue. He
inspired many others to write mysteries, including the famous Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle, who wrote about his well-known character, Sherlock Holmes.
The Twentieth Century: The Modernists
The
great modernists (per Carol Joyce Oates, New York Review of Books,
August 13, 2015): Joyce, Proust, Yeats, Lawrence, Woolf, Faulkner.
Revolutionaries in technique, their subjects were intimately bound up
with their own lives and their own regions; the modernist is one who is
likely to use his intimate life as material for his art, shaping the
ordinary into the extraordinary.
The Modernists: a reaction to
the Industrial Revolution and how society was changing quickly in the
first three decades of the 20th century. They were concerned about the
loss of their “way of life” – a life of leisure, wealth, literature, art
– although they only saw the literature and art as being important.
Perhaps the best quick look at the Modernists is Stephen Klaidman’s Sydney and Violet, c. 2013. I read an advance copy.
It seems Sydney and Violet Schiff (he was a wealthy average novelist
who kept popping up during the birth of the Modernists; she as a
remarkable editor) were instrumental in moving the Modernists along. The
book revolves around the Schiffs, Marcel Proust, TS Eliot, and Wyndham
Lewis.
Violet’s favorite writer when she married Sydney was Henry James, p. 55.
On page 46: “The key sociopolitical distinction the modernists made
was between classical (conservative) and romantic (liberal). …
Modernists of the Pound, Eliot, and Lewis school were classicists (human
beings are limited animals with a fixed nature); many others were still
romanticists (humanity’s inherent goodness justified liberty for all).”
– paraphrased.
[“The modernists were hardly the first to
recognize the relationship between music and felicitous language. But
they believed this relationship transcended beauty, that it was more
than a pleasant sensation independent of meaning. Many of them believed
that along with concrete images musical elements were indispensable for
communicating feelings as precisely as possible. – p. 54 – 55]
The literary journal for the modernists’: TS Eliot’s The Criterion:
contributors were a Who’s Who of modernism: William Butler Yeats, Luigi
Pirandello, Ezra Pound, EM Forster, Virginia Woolf, Marcel Proust, WH
Auden, Paul Valery, Jean Cocteau, Aldous Huxley, Herman Hesse, and Hart
Crane. (James Joyce about the only one not on the list.) -- p. 94 of
Klaidman’s book. [Elsewhere, I think Hart Crane is Harold Bloom’s
favorite — see The Daemon Knows.]
Klaidman says, p. 110, Joseph Conrad is “a godfather of modernism.”
One of bits of trivia I learned about the Modernists from Klaidman was
that they were obsessed with time (this explains, of course, Proust)
but then another Scottish poet with an incredible story, Edwin Muir
(1887 - 1959) who wrote in his diary, 1937 – 1939):
"I was born before the Industrial Revolution and am now about two hundred years old. But I have skipped a hundred and fifty of them. I was really born in 1737, and till I was fourteen no time-accidents happened to me. Then in 1751 I set out from Orkney for Glasgow. When I arrived I found that it was not 1751, but 1901, and that a hundred and fifty years had been burned up in my two day's journey. But I myself was still in 1751, and remained there for a long time. All my life since I have been trying to overhaul that invisible leeway. No wonder I am obsessed with Time." (Extract from Diary 1937-39.)
Edmund Wilson, in his landmark and career-making book, Axel’s Castle [Commonplace Notes], writes about six Modernist writers, more specifically the Symbolists:
- W.B. Yeats
- Paul Valéry
- T.S. Eliot
- Marcel Proust
- James Joyce
- Gertrude Stein
To Edmund Wilson’s list, add Virginia Woolf, as a modernist but not a
symbolist. I have not less than five books written by or about VW
sitting on my desk, ready to be read (summer, 2006), including The
Common Reader. [By December, 2006, I think I had at least a dozen
Virginia Woolf books (either books by Woolf or books about her or her
works). At this time, she and her works intrigue me the most. --
January 1, 2007] Woolf, herself, said she wanted to write in the style
of Joyce; I forget whether she stated she could do a better job at Joyce
than Joyce himself. I will most likely come across that diary entry
again some day. [Lots of notes on Woolf in this Commonplace Book.]
It is “impossible” to read Gertrude Stein’s first book, The Making of
The Americans. To some extent, I think she was “famous for being
famous.” She cultivated friendships with avant-garde writers and
painters, especially Picasso. She lived through two wars, WWI and WWII,
and experienced WWII up close and personal by remaining in France when
Americans were advised to leave. Despite being female and Jewish, she
survived the German Nazi occupation of France. Apparently she was a
great conversationalist, and a great speaker, and that’s probably what
helped establish her myth.
I had always been intrigued by the
author of The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas and a couple of good
articles in The New Yorker got me started. Again, I think Gertrude
Stein is more interesting as a personality (“famous for being famous”)
than as a writer. [October 7, 2007: a new Gertrude Stein biography has
just been published – Two Lives. The author is Janet Malcolm and is it
she who wrote three or four articles for The New Yorker. So, although I
don’t have the four New Yorker articles, her book is now available.]
Another writer that might be considered a modernist, although she
wrote more conventionally, is Karen Blixen / Isak Dinesen. She was
definitely a feminist; whether her writings revealed that or not is
something I have yet to discover.
Gorsky (1868 - 1935, Russian and Soviet writer; socialist proponent; nominated for Nobel Prize five times) said:
“Virginia Woolf speaks for the modern period. Modernism is the most important aesthetic movement of the twentieth century. Along with such experiments as Joyce, Eliot, Yeats, Faulkner, and Lawrence, Virginia Woolf is a prime representative of those so strongly affected by the tumultuous transition to the current [20th] century.”
According to Gorsky, at the time of Virginia’s birth,
“Victorian England was becoming increasingly aware of the tumultuous change which introduced what today is called the modern age. This period of upheaval witnessed frequently disruptive events in history and literature.
[Modernism defined.] The breakdown of the traditional Western family and of class structure, the coming of a major economic depression, the accelerated shift from an agricultural to an urban and industrialized society – these general trends were supported or symbolized by specific occurrences, among them the death of Queen Victoria, in 1901, the flights of the Wright brothers in 1903, and in 1914 the great climax of the first World War.
At the same time, startling new ideas were being promulgated by Carl Jung in anthropology and psychology, by Sigmund Freud in psychology, by William James in philosophy and psychology, by Henri Bergson in philosophy, by Albert Einstein in the sciences, and by Sir James Frazer in anthropology.
However little or much the theories of these important thinkers may have been understood by their popular audiences, there can be no question of their impact. For example, Jung’s work suggested strange and universal links among all people, an idea supported by Frazer’s study of myths which repeat themselves from one community to another, from one culture to another. The explorers offered support for each others’ ideas, and the ideas themselves inflamed the curious and sensitive who learned of the new discoveries.”
Somewhere Gorsky stated that the transition from the Victorian Age to the Modern Age was as remarkable as the transition from the Dark (Medieval) Ages to the Renaissance Age. That is a remarkable statement if one stops to think about it a moment.
Gorsky: 1868 - 1935 -- think about this:
- US Civil war, recent memory
- Russian revolution
- WWI
- global depression
- years leading up to WWII
***********************************
Interior Monologue
Concepts of interior monologue, James Joyce: A Literary Life, Morris Beja, p. 67.
Concepts of “female writing,” James Joyce: A Literary Life, Morris Beja, p. 69.
The Confessional Poets
The
confessional poets (per Carol Joyce Oates, New York Review of Books,
August 13, 2015): Robert Lowell, John Berryman, W. D. Snodgrass, Anne
Sexton, Sylvia Plath, to a degree Elizabeth Bishop — rendered their
lives as art, as if self-hypnotized. Of our contemporaries, writers as
seemingly divers as Saul Bellow, Philip Roth, and John Updike created
distinguished careers out of their lives, often retuning to familiar
subjects, lovingly and tirelessly reimagining their own pasts as if
mesmerized by the wonder of “self.”
The Twentieth Century: The Obelisk Press
Instrumental in publishing “modernist” writers in the first half of the 20th century when other publishers refused.
Reading the Wyndham Lewis biography (O’Keeffe) brought me to this via a Google search.
The Guardian’s review of Neil Parson’s Obelisk: A History of Jack
Kahane and the Obelisk Press, publication date: February 15, 2008
"Neil Pearson’s book is a work of enthusiastic bibliographical scholarship, a brief biography, and a series of well-turned pen portraits. . . . Pearson is as adroit a writer as he is watchable an actor. . . . Everyone with an interest in literary history will enjoy Pearson’s narrative. His portraits of minor figures such as Marjorie Firminger, who had the misfortune to became infatuated with Wyndham Lewis, are particularly touching and sympathetic."
—Guardian
Book Description
Obelisk:
A History of Jack Kahane and the Obelisk Press details the history of
one of the most extraordinary—and controversial—publishing enterprises
of the twentieth century. Publisher simultaneously of the infamous
novels of the literary elite as well as low-budget erotica and “dirty
books,” Jack Kahane’s Obelisk Press published the likes of Henry Miller,
James Joyce, Anaïs Nin, and D.H. Lawrence, alongside a lengthy list of
censor-baiting eccentrics like N. Reynolds Packard, the New York Daily
News’ Rome correspondent and the self-styled “Marco Polo of Sex.”
Here,
for the first time, is the story of this remarkable venture, which
captures some of the twentieth century’s most outrageous literary
personalities and their often scandalous exploits, including the failed
golf club society magazine run by Nin, Miller, and Lawrence Durrell and
the tortured relationship between Obelisk author Marjorie Firminger and
Wyndham Lewis. A richly illustrated cultural history of 1920s Paris, a
fully-narrated bibliography of works published by an unforgettable
literary institution, and a glimpse into the remarkable life of the
Press’s creator, Jack Kahane, The Obelisk Press is a publishing event
not to be missed by anyone with an interest in twentieth-century
literary lives and letters.
The Twentieth Century: The Surrealists
I don’t know much about this genre yet; it appears Anaïs Nin may be
the prototype. Could she be considered the Ur-Surrealist? Zelda
Fitzgerald (1900 – 1948) would definitely be considered a surrealist.
Surrealism was a cultural movement that began in the early 1920s.
The
Surrealists (per Carol Joyce Oates, New York Review of Books, August
13, 2015): the Surrealists considered the world a vast “forest of signs”
to be interpreted by the individual artist. Beneath its apparent
disorder the visual world contains messages and symbols — like a dream?
Is the world a collective dream?
Surrealist artists —>
photography. Henri Cartier-Bresson, Weegee, Bruce Davidson, Garry
Winogrand, the newly discovered Vivian Maier, Diane Arbus, (whose
strategy was “to go where I’ve never been”), and numerous others.
The Twentieth Century: Symbolism
See Edmund Wilson’s Axel’s Castle: A Study in the Imaginative
Literature of 1870 – 1930, (1931), which was a sweeping survey of
Symbolism. It covered Arthur Rimbaud, Auguste Villiers de l’Isle-Adam
(author of Axel), W. B. Yeats, Paul Valéry, T. S. Eliot, Marcel Proust,
James Joyce, and Gertrude Stein. (Henry Miller and Anaïs Nin came later
in terms of publishing their first novels, in the mid- to late-1930’s.)
I wonder if I need to include a section on Edmund
Wilson. Having read Dabney’s biography and having read summaries of
that book and the life of Wilson on the web, it makes me wonder how I
missed Wilson all these years. And if I missed him, how many other
people have missed him.
The Twentieth Century: Naturalism
While reading Leon Edel’s biography of Henry James, I came across
Stephen Crane. His first novel (novella) was Maggie: A Girl of the
Streets.
From wiki: “Stephen Crane’s Maggie is regarded as the
first work of unalloyed naturalism in American fiction. According to
naturalistic principles, a character is set into a world where there is
no escape from one’s biological heredity. Additionally, the
circumstances in which a person finds himself will dominate one’s
behavior, depriving the individual of responsibility. Although Stephen
Crane denied any influence by Emile Zola, the creator of Naturalism, on
his work, examples in his texts indicate that this American author was
inspired by French naturalism.”
Naturalism and Realism
Naturalism
is a literary movement that emphasizes observation and the scientific
method in the fictional portrayal of reality. Novelists writing in the
natural mode include Emile Zola (its founder), Guy de Maupassant, Thomas
Hardy, Theodore Dreiser, Stephen Crane, and Frank Norris.
The Twentieth Century: Franz Kafka
1883 – 1924
Age 41, tuberculosis
Published posthumously:
The Trial, published by Max Brod
The Castle, completed and published by Max Brod
Amerika, published by Max Brod
The
introduction by Max Brod to Amerika is particularly enlightening. Max
Brod specifically notes that Kafka was NOT a surrealist; he wrote his
introduction in 1940.
The Twentieth Century: Graphic Novels
Numerous websites. Graphic novels have probably been around since the 1940’s; considered by some to be of American origin.
The Twentieth Century: Gonzo Journalism
Of American origin, specifically: Hunter S. Thompson, in the 1950’s, first with Hell’s Angels.
I first read Hell’s Angels, and thus became acquainted with HST, in
the summer of 2000, when I was living in my office at the 1st Medical
Group, Langley AFB, VA, as I transitioned from commander at that
hospital, to a staff position at the Air Intelligence Agency, Lackland
AFB, San Antonio, TX.
The Twentieth Century: Theater
Eugene O’Neill: four Pulitzer prizes; first (only?) American playwright to be awarded Nobel Prize (1936).
Everything changed with Eugene O’Neill in Provincetown, Cape Cod, 1916.
From Leona Egan: “Why this instantaneous approval of O’Neill? Most of the artists and writers were familiar with the leading playwrights of Europe, such as Strindberg and Ibsen, whose work had inspired O’Neill. O’Neill had adopted the Europeans’ melancholy and introspective themes to become America’s own apostle of woe. Until O’Neill, no American dramatist had brought the new genre to home shores. He was the first to challenge the century’s materialism; the first to stage the lower-class idiom and life on an American stage; and the first to American playwright to work solely as an artist. Many of the innovate techniques that he later employed in his major dramas – poetic use of light and sound, dialect, dramatic narrative – had their beginnings in this germinal play (Bound East for Cardiff), the one he selected for his premier.”
Eugene O’Neill was only American playwright to win a Nobel Prize (1936).
The Twentieth Century: Miscellaneous
1. I found the biography of Daphne du Maurier [Daphne du Maurier:
The Secret Life of the Renowned Storyteller] by Margaret Forster
particularly interesting.
Some highlights, maybe to be filled in later.
I first came across Daphne du Maurier in my “classic movie” phase, and
I happened to watch Hitchcock’s Rebecca, and was curious about the
author of that book.
Daphne was born in a literary family;
her grandfather was a writer, and her father was a successful English
playwright who plays were staged in London.
She therefore had
the name, the money, and the time, as well as the open doors of
publishers, to become a writer. She wrote much but is remembered most
for Rebecca, a novel, which was made into a very successful movie by
Alfred Hitchcock. Rebecca was Hitchcock’s first movie made after he
moved to the US. He moved to the US because he felt Hollywood was where
the action was, where one’s name would be made in filmmaking.
Interestingly enough, one of her many short stories, The Birds was
also made into a very successful movie by Alfred Hitchcock.
She married a major in the British Army, Tommy Browning, who rose to
the rank of Lieutenant General during WWII and who was responsible for
merging the gliders and the paratroopers into the 1st Airborne
Division. Tommy Browning was the subject of a book and movie, A Bridge
Too Far, in which the British were depicted as overstretching their men
and failing miserably when trying to re-take Arnhem in WWII. Browning,
after the war, became the comptroller for Princess and then Queen
Elizabeth. Daphne was a close friend of the Royal family.
Daphne is a minor author in the big scheme of things, but an important writer, nonetheless.
2. Monica Ali, Brick Lane
a. A recommendation from Colette Luscomb, Menwith Hill Station,
when I told her about my newfound enthusiasm for literature
b. This contemporary novel was an exception in my reading program;
before reading a whole lot of contemporary “stuff,” I want to read the
“classics”
c. I see this book, soft cover, frequently
featured at Borders. It must be relatively well read among contemporary
novels
Out of Africa, Karen Blixen, later Isak Dinesen.
Tim
O’Brien: excellent novels about the Vietnam war, perhaps along the line
of Ernest Hemingway. I’ve read Going After Cacciato and If I Die in a
Combat Zone: Box Me Up and Ship Me Home; I think I might enjoy The
Things They Carried.
Poetry: A Definition
New
Yorker, 6 Nov 06, Robert Gottlieb, quoting a 1950’s publisher: “... a
freshness and liveliness of feeling, a gift for imagery, and a power of
expression that were quite exceptional -- in short, a poet.”
“Poetry is the connecting link between body and mind. Every idea in poetry is grounded in emotion.” Camille Paglia, Sexual Personae, c. 1990, p. 18.
From
wiki: Louise Bogan, 1897 – 1970; an American poet who felt that “lyric
poetry” if it at all authentic…is based on some emotion – on some
occasion, on some real confrontation.”
Paul Dirac, one of the
creators of quantum mechanics: “As a physicist I take what is
complicated and make it simple. But the poet does the very opposite.”
Personal
thoughts: one cannot be sentimental in novels (there can be sentiment,
but the author cannot be sentimental); however, poetry is all about
emotion, including sentimentality.
Poetry: Miscellaneous
Edna St Vincent Millay: first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for poetry (The Harp Weaver)
Love interest of Edmund Wilson, and others
Sylvia
Plath: the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize posthumously (note: not
just the first woman, but the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize
posthumously); 1982; she died 1963
Poetry: Faulkner (1897 – 1962)
- (Contemporary of Hemingway (1899 – 1961)
- “On the Demands of Writing Short Stories”
Q: Mr Faulkner, you spoke about The Sound and the Fury as starting out to write a short story and it kept growing. Well now, do you think that it’s easier to write a novel than a short story?
A: Yes sir. You can be more careless, you can put more trash in it and be excused for it. In a short story that’s next to the poem, almost every word has got to be almost exactly right. In the novel you can be careless but in the short story you can’t. I mean by that the good short stories like Chekhov wrote That’s why I rate that second – it’s because it demands a nearer absolute exactitude. You have less room to be slovenly and careless. There’s less room in it for trash. It’s got to be absolutely impeccable, absolutely perfect.
-- From Faulkner in the University
-- edited by Frederick Gwynn and Joseph Blotner
July 21, 2024: "A short story that's next to the poem, almost every word has got to be almost exactly right."
Hemingway said the same thing and was known for the "tightness" of his writing. Apparently, he would re-read his manuscripts in draft and cut out any words he felt were not needed. He expected the reader to fill in the missing words, if necessary.
July 21, 2024: I do believe Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway was a prose poem -- a poem written in prose.
The Villanelle
I think I recall seeing a reference to the villanelle earlier, but I
explored this form of poetry more seriously after reading Sylvia Plath’s
journals when she said she had written some villanelles.
According to wiki:
A villanelle is a poetic form which entered English-language poetry in the 1800s from the imitation of French models. A villanelle has only two rhyme sounds. The first and third lines of the first stanza are rhyming refrains that alternate as the third line in each successive stanza and form a couplet at the close. A villanelle is nineteen lines long, consisting of five tercets and one concluding quatrain.
Poetry: Sylvia Plath
In 1982, Plath became the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize
posthumously for The Collected Poems. In 2006, a graduate student at
Virginia Commonwealth University discovered a previously unpublished
poem by Sylvia Plath in the archives at Indiana University. She claims
the 14-line Petrarchan sonnet, Ennui, was created from notes Plath wrote
in a copy of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby.
Poetry: Stephen Spender
Born 1909. Autobiography at age 40; written 1947 – 1950 at Frieda
Lawrence ranch overlooking Taos, New Mexico. A fellow classmate at
Oxford (one year his senior): WH Auden. Starting in his last year at
Oxford and for three years spent six months of every year (1930 – 1933)
in Germany. Saw rise of Hitler. Christopher Isherwood, a close friend.
Enjoyed T.S. Eliot, Ernest Hemingway. The afterword he wrote for his
autobiography, World Within World, must be read before reading the
autobiography. He wrote the autobiography when he was 84 years old; he
died the next year. He felt his life was divided into two halves:
pre-Spanish Civil War (late 1930’s) and post-Spanish Civil War. He was
too young to fight, but old enough to remember WWI; he went to Spain
during the Spanish Civil War; did not fight in WWII as far as I know.
I’ve not read any of his poetry, only his autobiography.
ENGLISH ERAS
The eras:
- Elizabethan era: reign of Queen Elizabeth, 1558 – 1603, golden age of English history
- Jacobean era: reign of King James I (father of Charles), 1603 – 1642,
- [Shakespeare died about 1611]
- Jacobian: derived from Hebrew name Jacob, the original form of the English name James
- Caroline era: coincides with the Stuart period, 1603 – 1714;
- Coincides with reign of King Charles I, 1625 – 1642
- English Civil War, 1642 – 1651; Parliamentarians and Royalists
- English Interregnum, 1651 – 1660
- Began with the regicide of Charles I (1649; ended with restoration of Charles II, 1660)
LISTS
Book Lists
Other Lists
ESSAYS / RAMBLING THOUGHTS
RECREATIONAL READING: Connecting the Dots
The Romantic Period: 1798 - 1832
Lyrical Ballads (Wordsworth) - Death of Göethe
24 May 05: I am currently reading many, many books -- voraciously
reading as a way to stem off depression and a way to appear to be
actively engaged in something.
During the summer year between
my junior year and senior year in high school I attended a summer
course at St Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota. The course was on the
Romantic Period. At the time, I had no clue what the Romantic Period
was all about. Either I was a bit dense or the instructors (at home and
at St Olaf) did not adequately explain what the Romantic Period was all
about. [Looking back on this, my Williston high school English teacher
who had offered me this opportunity to spend the summer studying the
Romantic Period, could have spent some time with me, giving me special
instruction on Romanticism. Of course, I could have done that on my
own, but it never occurred to me to do that.]
I now
understand that period very, very well, at least as JRR Tolkien would
state, I have established my myth as regards this period.
The
Romantic Period is generally agreed to begin with Wordsworth’s
publication of the Lyrical Ballads in 1798 and ended with the passage of
the Reform Act in Parliament (England) in 1832 . [ British poet whose
most important collection, Lyrical Ballads (1798), published jointly
with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped establish romanticism in England.
He was appointed poet laureate in 1843.] [Göethe was born in 1749 and
died in 1832.]
Regardless of whether I understood any of the
Romantic Period that summer at St Olaf -- and I don’t think I understood
much -- the fact remains that the phrase “Romantic Period” stayed with
me, not far from my daily consciousness.
How ironic, then,
about 40 years later, I end up in England, visiting the Brontë parsonage
and museum, a product of the Romantic Period. Earlier this year I went
through my Brontë phase (discussed elsewhere) but through Brontë I have
been drawn ever deeper into the Romantic Period. I love connecting
dots and each day it appears I find more dots to connect.
Briefly this is where it stands. The dots (I will leave it to the
reader to connect the dots): The St Olaf summer course on the Romantic
Period, 1965. Visiting the Brontë museum in Yorkshire, 2003. Going
through a Brontë phase in early 2004. Reading Christopher Hitchen’s
book review of a newly translated version of the Russian novel, A Hero
in Our Time, by Lermontov. Not understanding that review (Christopher
Hitchens can be hard to understand) I did some background research on
Lermontov and learned that Lermontov took on the mantle of Pushkin;
Pushkin, who traced his growth and philosophy to Byron. That prompted
me to some background research on Byron to learn that he is one of the
triumvirate that exemplifies the Romantic Period: the triumvirate of
Byron, Shelley, and Keats. [Or as I now write: byronshelleyandkeats,
like lewisandclark, peanutbutterandjelly, byronshelleyandkeats.]
The dots continue: Mentioning to her that I enjoyed Charlotte
Brontë's Jane Eyre, a friend [Colette Luscomb] suggested Jane Austen’s
Pride and Prejudice. I completed my Austen phase -- not quite as
expansive or as extensive as my Brontë phase, but I can always return to
Austen -- but then somehow I learned of George Eliot. I don’t recall
how I learned of Mary Ann (Marian). These three women (Charlotte
Brontë, Jane Austen, and George Eliot) all published anonymously, and
perhaps while reading one of their bios George Eliot was referenced.
I asked Mary Corbin, San Antonio, 2005 who had her master’s degree in
British Literature and taught British Literature most of her life, where
to go next. Among many works, she mentioned (and raved about Silas
Marner by George Eliot). I had read Silas Marner in high school but did
not recall it. I went to the half-price bookstore and bought a copy of
Silas Marner but saw a thicker novel by George Eliot that intrigued me
even more: Middlemarch. At the time of this writing, I am now halfway
through that novel and enjoy it immensely. [I read Silas Marner later.
To say that Silas Marner was incredible is an understatement. My
contemporaries remember Silas Marner being about “a creepy man” if they
remember the story at all. The story is so wonderful on so many
levels. I want to read it again; I now understand why people read great
books over and over.]
After background reading, going
through my Brontë phase, and now my Austen phase, I now find reading
these 19th century novels a bit easier. For example, I learn that the
term “Miss ______” designates the young woman as the elder daughter of
the family, and the one who the parents are eager to marry off first.
Once she is married, the next oldest daughter becomes the “Miss
_______.”
While reading these books, I somehow came across
Göethe. Perhaps I remembered that I read some of his works (probably
Faust) during that St Olaf summer. I never understood a thing I read in
Faust, I don’t remember any of it, and I certainly don’t know anything
about Göethe. [Even now I have trouble understanding it; it seems it
would help students immensely for professors to provide the background
necessary to understand the story; the fact they do not, suggests that
even professors have trouble understanding the story. Interestingly,
having read synopses of Faust and the biography of Göethe, suggests some
interesting similarities between the Faust myth and Göethe himself.]
So, one day, while surfing the internet, I find that Göethe's “official
biographer,” Eckermann published a book called Conversations with
Göethe. I ordered it, and find it intriguing. Perhaps more on that
later. Interesting, Göethe died in 1832, the year that historians
generally agree was the end of the Romantic Period. Coincidence? I’m
not sure. [In March, 2006, I began reading the 3-volume biography of
Göethe by Nicholas Boyle. Sebastian Vogt showed me the biography, in a
chance visit, to his and Ruth Robinson’s home.]
Göethe, in
Conversations with Göethe, makes numerous references to Byron. It
appears that the star in front of Göethe is Byron. Byron appears to be
the brightest dot, and centered among all the rest of the dots. I may
save my “Byron phase” for last.
Meanwhile, through unrelated
reasons, I am reading Volume I (and the only volume published to date)
of the Collected Letters of C. S. Lewis. Throughout the Letters, C. S.
Lewis references many of the same books I’m reading; early on (his high
school years) there are many references to the Brontës and Jane Austen.
His letters, in a vague sort of way, help connect some of the dots.
At the half-price bookstore, I also came across an old copy of
Norton's Anthology of English Literature, Volume 2. The preface and
introduction do a great job providing further background to the Romantic
Period, the Victorian Period, and the 90’s.
1. Virginia Woolf – Septimus – Thomas Hardy
Martin Seymour-Smith in his biography of Thomas Hardy mentions a “Septimus Brooke” in George Eliot’s Middlemarch.
I don’t recall, and can find no evidence, that Mr Brooke’s Christian
name was ever provided in the novel. Either Martin Seymour-Smith made an
error (unlikely; but no footnotes or bibliography to cross-check) or
the serial of Middlemarch included Septimus as Mr Brooke’s first
name. Let’s assume Seymour-Smith has it right, that Mr Brooke’s first
name was Septimus.
Critics thought anonymously published novels
by Thomas Hardy were in fact by George Eliot [Thomas Hardy, 1840- 1928;
George Eliot, 1819 – 1880].
Leslie Stephen (1832 – 1904) was the
editor of the magazine that published serializations by Thomas Hardy. In
addition, Hardy himself stated, according to Seymour-Smith, that “his
[Stephen Lewis] thinking had influenced him [Hardy] more than that of
any other contemporary.” – p. 182, Seymour-Smith.
Leslie Stephen
was Virginia Woolf’s father. It is not a stretch to think that Virginia
Woolf (1882 – 1941) would have heard of “Septimus” from her father.
In Mrs Dalloway,
Clarissa’s doppelganger is a shell-shocked man named Septimus. The
dots don’t connect perfectly but Septimus is an unusual enough name to
suggest that there may be a connection between George Eliot – Thomas
Hardy – Stephen Leslie – Virginia Woolf.
Miscellaneous
Open Marriage: A New Life Style for Couples was a best selling book published by M. Evans & Company in 1972 by Nena O'Neill and George O'Neill. It was on the New York Times Best Seller list for 40 weeks.
Bruce Oksol:
- 1969: graduated from college
- 1971: summer, met Linda Fisher, no relationship
- 1973: summer, revisited Linda Fisher; relationship established
- 1974: Linda told me to read O'Neill's book on Open Marriage
- I had no problem with the book and understood her concerns completely
- but it was very, very difficult
- late 1974, or thereabouts, the geographical relationship broke up; Open Marriage might have been in Linda's mind; it was not in my mind. Perhaps I was unable to move to her "level."
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