Survey 2 Flashcards

1
Q

How can postmodern Literature be characterized?

A

by the use of

  • metafiction,
  • unreliable narration,
  • self-reflexivity,
  • intertextuality, and which often thematizes both historical and political issues.

___
Metafiction = writing about writing or “foregrounding the apparatus”, as it’s typical of deconstructionist approaches, making the artificiality of art or the fictionality of fiction apparent to the reader and generally disregards the necessity for “willing suspension of disbelief.” For example, postmodern sensibility and metafiction dictate that works of parody should parody the idea of parody itself.
___

This style of experimental literature emerged strongly in the United States in the 1960s through the writings of authors such as Kurt Vonnegut, Thomas Pynchon, and John Barth.

Precursors to postmodern literature: include
Laurence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy (1760-1767)
Jack Kerouac’s On the Road (1957)
- but postmodern literature was particularly prominent in the 1960s and 1970s.
In the 21st century, American literature still features a strong current of postmodern writing, like the postironic Dave Eggers’ A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (2000) and Jennifer Egan’s A Visit from the Goon Squad (2011). These works, however, also further develop the postmodern form.

__

Sometimes the term “postmodernism” is used to discuss many different things ranging from architecture, to historical theory, to philosophy and film.

  • -> several people distinguish between several forms of postmodernism and thus suggest that there are three forms of postmodernism:
    (1) Postmodernity is understood as a historical period from the mid-1960s to the present
    (2) theoretical postmodernism, which encompasses the theories developed by thinkers such as Roland Barthes, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and others.
    (3) “cultural postmodernism,” which includes film, literature, visual arts, etc. that feature postmodern elements. Postmodern literature is, in this sense, part of cultural postmodernism.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Romanticism - Poetry

What is Romanticism, what is its historical context?

A

SUM UP
- Romantic poets affirm the creative powers of the imagination  in contrast to preceding neo-classical traditions
Romantic poets introduce us to a new way of looking at Nature, which becomes the main subject of their work.
Romantic poets tend to explain human society and its development with an “organic” model (an organism, interdependency)
Value of individual experience
The artist as sage / philosopher / prophet
______

Survey Primary Texts:
William Blake: “Visions of the Daughters of Albion” (1793)
William Wordsworth: “Tintern Abbey” (1798)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: “Kubla Khan” (1816)
____
What came before?
- Early to mid- 18th century:
– Neo-Classicism
– Enlightenment
–> Some tenets of Romanticism can be seen as a continuation of certain aspects of the Enlightenment, some are a clear reaction against it –> “anti-rational”
–> Certainly against neo-classicist style, including an aversion against fixed forms and genres
_____

Romanticism

  • Revolution
  • Reaction
  • Emotion / “Sensibility”
  • Myth and the Supernatural / “Gothic”
  • Nature
  • Art
  • differences in style, subject matter, and expression
  • Discovery of “the inside”: the individual interiority, psychology
  • Metaphor and symbol: search for new connections, found primarily in nature
  • Use of simple, “natural” language

_______

HISTORY:

  • Political and emotional Romanticism influenced by three major aspects:
    • American and French Revolutions (1776, 1779): seen as dawning of a new age, met first with enthusiasm, then, in the case of France with increasing despair
    • Beginning Industrialisation which deeply alters both social bonds and the British landscape
    • Colonialism changes from sth adventurous into a fact of the lives of the middle classes, becomes part of British identity

_______

WRITERS:
▪ Dryden
▪ Pope

  • ->Pope: Forms like the “mock-epic”, often satirical and ironic
  • Obsession with formal features of genres / sub-genres…
  • -> Dryden: elevating English poetry by searching examples in classic poetry
  • Heavy reliance on making connections with (and showing off) classic knowledge

____
Why do we call it “Romanticism”?

▪ Interest in and fascination with the medieval ballads, romances
▪ Poets try to revive the “grand narratives”: the heroic, the magic, the supernatural
–> “manifesto” of Romantic Poetry: Coleridge / Wordsworth in Lyrical Ballads (1789), striving to express “persons and characters supernatural, or at least romantic”.
-> Schlegel (1815): opposition of “classic” and “modern” art (again), “modern” here firstly connected with “Judeo-Christian” culture

A new Understanding of Art: There is no hierarchy among the genres and forms

  • -> “incidents and situations from common life”
  • -> “all good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Romanticism - Novel

A

Survey example reading:

  • Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
  • Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

SUM UP
▪ Romanticism was an encompassing artistic movement, also spreading to the novel form
▪ Novel of Ideas –> philosophy
▪ Gothic Novel –> terror and horror –> sci-fi
▪ Historical Novel –> re-imagining the medieval past to create an image of the nation
▪ Novel of class and realism –> Jane Austen
▪ Epistolary novel, novel in free indirect discourse with 3rd person narrator
▪ Novel of sensibility and realist novel

_______

▪ Romanticism as an aesthetic category
▪ The Gothic Novel
▪ Mary Shelley. Frankenstein
▪ The Historical Novel: Sir Walter Scott
▪ Jane Austen: from the novel of ideas towards realism

____
Recap Romantic Poetry:
- Romantic poets affirm the creative powers of the imagination - in contrast to preceding neo-classical traditions
- Romantic poets introduce us to a new way of looking at Nature, which becomes the main subject of their work.
- Romantic poets tend to explain human society and its development with an “organic” model (an organism, interdependency)
- Value of individual experience
- The artist as sage / philosopher / prophet
____

The Romantic Novel:
▪ Novel is developing into serious artform
▪ 18th century debate between romance and realism continues
▪ Novel of social questions also develops
▪ Great popularity of the Gothic Romance
–> aestheticized, imaginary “medieval” quality in buildings, artworks, stories and settings: connotation of a ‘before’, in literature evokes “disordered” feelings by effects of terror
–> Example: “Castle of Otranto” by Walpole in 1764

The Gothic novel:
…has been identified as a British, Protestant, middle class form which
located its ‘others’ among tyrannical and
gloomy Catholic artistocrats and violent, unruly plebeians.
- superstition, tyranny, violence, incest,
disordered family relations
–> Scare stories for the bourgeois middle class
–> Extremely popular

“Female Gothic”:
- female writers in the genre

Ann Radcliffe (Formula)
• All multi-volume novels
• Similar plot: “the persecuted motherless
female, subject to threats and imprisonment by older tyrannical males, amid a picturesque Italiante landscape” (P 310), supernatural occurences are explained away
- generally seen as the “master” of
the gothic form

Later: Austen wrote satire on the Radcliffe Formula

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Victorian Age - Poetry

A

Reading:

  • Tennyson ‘In Memoriam’
  • Rossetti ‘A Birthday’
  • Browning ‘My Last Duchess’

What is special about Victorian Poetry?
“Whether on the way from Romantic poetry, or on the way to modernism, it is situated between two kinds of excitement, of which it seems not
to participate.” Armstrong, p.1
- Paradoxical interest and tastes
- Emotional and intellectual ambiguity
- Poetry was seen as a realm to experiment with the expressions of subjectivity
________________
THEMES and TOPICS
▪ Subjectivity and Individuality
▪ Emotion
▪ Finding subjective language and metaphors
▪ Building a link to the past – medievalism, as part of nationalism
▪ Incorporating new knowledge in a rapidly modernising society full of scientific advances
▪ Faith and Doubt
▪ Death, grief and memory
▪ Public and Private Selves

\_\_\_\_\_\_
STYLES
▪ Transformation and development
▪ “Male” forms appear anew with “female”
speakers and lyrical persona (Elizabeth
Barrett Browning, Sonnets from the
Portuguese; Christina Rossetti, Monna
Innominata)
▪ Rise of the long narrative poem (Tennyson, Idylls of the King)
▪ Dramatic Monologue (Browning, My Last
Duchess)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Victorian Age - Novel

A

.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

cultural work and literature

A

To deal “only with literature” isn’t enough:

  • Literature (and other cultural products) is never created in an artsy space away from all influences of society, economy, history.
  • And even if it was, that would say something about its time and place, too.
  • Especially in older texts, “only the literature” will not make you able to understand even only the literature.

_____

Cultural Work:
circulation of topics, ideas, themes, or actual artworks through different realms of societies, groups and times

  • closely linked to ideas of cultural memory as a dynamic exchange with the past
  • Literature itself performs this work, but so does the history of literature

____

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Literary History, Canonization and Power

A

What is remembered?
–> What counts as literature? Who defines what is ‘literary’ and what is not?

Who remembers?
–> Who has power over the cultural past, who has access / resources?

Why is it remembered?
–> Who are the stakeholders in remembering whose literary history?
___

Stuart Hall, Circuit of Culture (Representation, 1997)

  • consumption
  • regulation
  • representation
  • production
  • identity
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Romanticism

Bullet points

A

(late 18th – early 19th century)

  • Revolution
  • Reaction
  • Emotion / “Sensibility”
  • Myth and the Supernatural / “Gothic”
  • Nature / “the sublime”
  • Art / “all good poetry results from the overflow of spontaneous emotion”
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Victorian Era

Bullet points

A

(~ 1840-1901)

  • Empire: Largest extension of British Empire in its history
  • Science: Darwin
  • Industrialisation
  • Technology: Photography
  • Modernity: Social Questions - Dickens
  • Pre-Raphaelitism
  • Medievalism / Neo-Gothic
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Fin de Siecle/Aestheticism

Bullet Points

A

(around 1900)

  • Fabianism / Socialism / Women’s Movement
  • Popular Culture
  • Diversification of social attitudes / interests
  • Dandyism
  • “Jugendstil”: Beginning of movements for “organic” life-styles
  • Empire: Questions of national identity
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Modernism (around WW1)

Bullet points

A
  • What is truly modern literary form?
  • Shedding Victorian values
  • Experiment in form
  • Changing relations between sexes, classes
  • Experiences of trauma: war
  • The end of old certainties
  • multiperspectivity
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Post-45

bullet points

A
  • Angry Young Men
  • Kitchen Sink
  • Theatre of the Absurd
  • Rise of political and social equality
  • Realistic techniques
  • Social criticism
  • Loss of Empire
  • Beginning of Multi-Ethnic Britain
  • Rise of Popular Culture
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Postmodernism

bullet points

A

(1968-)

No stable meaning
No stable form
Meta-literary forms
Non-linearity
Unrealiable narration
Questioning of “grand narratives” of history and science
Stress on the constructedness of abstract notions deemed fundamental in previous periods

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Multi-Ethnic British Literature (around 1950 -)

bullet points

A
  • Reflecting the multi-ethnic reality of Britain after WWII
    . Envisioning ways of a multi-cultural identity
  • Expressions of experiences of
    – Migration
    – Racism
    – Classism
    – Belonging and Alienation
  • Post-ethnic identity constructions vs. search for ethnic / religious / cultural “roots”
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Contemporary British Literature (around 2000-)

bullet points

A
  • Singular trends cannot be made out
  • Postmodern, realist, genre-converging styles
  • Novels and short stories
  • Continuing diversification of authors’ ethnic/ gender/ class backgrounds
  • Continuing topics of migration and identity
  • Impact of old and new wars / ‘war on terror’
  • Memory
  • Devolution, nature and landscape
  • Again: Questions of National Identity
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Postcolonial literature in English

bullet points

A
  • Literature in English produced by writers from and set in former British colonies
  • But, fluid boundary with multi-ethnic British lit.
  • Addressing decolonisation processes
  • Reflecting legacy of colonisation
  • Searching for new voices / stories
  • Closely connected to notions and names in postcolonial theory
17
Q

Periodization and Canonization…

A

… aren’t absolutes, but always debated and debatable
… nevertheless, give a certain heuristic structure to the study of English literary history
…become more and more questionable from the mid-20th century onwards
… complex also due to the rise of popular culture / ‘high’ culture convergence, simultaneity of different trends, styles and ideas

18
Q

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein

  • text
  • cultural work
  • author
A

▪ Epistolary novel
▪ Operates with various narrators
▪ Frame narrative of Captain Robert Walpole’s
letters to his sister
▪ Discovery of Frankenstein and the monster at
the North Pole
▪ Narrative voice of both Frankenstein and the
monster
▪ Murders, crime, monstrosity, exotic setting of
Arctic region, Geneva, Germany…
_____

Cultural Work:
Aspects of the Gothic novel, but also: first
science fiction novel
▪ Context of contemporary science: Galvanism
and the Vitalist Debate
▪ Context of contemporary explorations: Royal
Navy expeditions to locate the magnetic
North Poles
▪ Context of Mary Shelley’s parents
philosophies
–> daughter of liberal philosophers
▪ Mary Wollstonecraft, “A Vindication of the
Rights of Woman”, 1792
▪ William Godwin, “Political Justice”, 1793
–> Crime is the result of socio-political
circumstances, not of an “original sin”
–> The monster claims to have been benevolent, is capable to educate itself, becomes a murder through the hate and rejection of society – how much are individuals responsible?

\_\_\_\_
Cultural work: 
F. and contemporary issues today?
▪ Context of posthuman theory
▪ What is a human being?
▪ What kinds of beings have feelings /
consciousness / should have rights?
▪ Artificial intelligence?
▪ “Updatings” as a cultural icon
19
Q

Sir Walter Scott

A

Romantic Period

▪ Inauguration of the genre of “the historical
novel”, rise of popular medievalism
▪ Waverley (1814): Urban Enlightenment in
Edinburgh vs Romantic clan system of the
Highlands
▪ Ivanhoe: A Romance (1819): the “organic”
development of a nation, set in 12th century
(Saxons, Normans, Christians and Jews)
Narrating a British past
Building of national identity

20
Q

Jane Austen

  • Romantic writer?
  • novels
A

(1775-1815)

THE Novelist of the Romantic Period
--> but was she a Romantic writer?
- Much of her interests
seem to lie rather with
the writers of the 18th
century
- Her style partially
premediates Victorian
realism
- Witty dialogue has
aspects of the comedy
of manners

BUT all her novels discuss the topics of their times.
▪ Northanger Abbey (1818): Satire of the Gothic
obsessions
▪ Sense and Sensibility (1811): contrast of two sisters,
radicalisation of sensibility in the 1790s is reflected
▪ Pride and Prejudice (1813): love, class, and social
pressure
▪ Mansfield Park (1814): values of the English gentry
▪ Emma (1816): Young, imaginative, active woman and
social obligations
▪ Persuasion (1818): duties of the landed gentry
–> Realistic representations of the upper 10.000 of Regency England

21
Q

Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

  • publication history
  • plot, bullet points
A
  • Mixes actual and fictional locations in Novel

“Sense and sensibility was projected as an epistolary novel, entitled ‘Elinor and Marianne’, in 1795, at the height of the debates about sensibility and its relationship to politically radical ideas. The 1790s were the period when the ‘Jacobin’ novel of ideas was current, and
from 1793 onwards, the beginnings of anti-Jacobin backlash in Britain were evident. Austen worked on the novel but did not publish it until 1811, as Sense and Sensibility, when debates about sensibility had become rather
dated” (Poplawski 383)

_____

Plot:
▪ Two Sisters, Marianne and Elinor Dashwood
▪ Somewhat “tumbling” socially after death of father
▪ Must be married quickly
▪ Are both implicated in “unhappy”, than
“happy” love relationships
▪ Free direct discourse, often following the point of view of rational Elinor
▪ Marianne, the promoter of Romantic
sensibility and emotional overload, comes across as ridiculous sometimes

▪ Chapters we read:
- Marianne’s infatuation with John Willoughby turns out to be a chimera, he has fooled her and she has willingly been fooled until she is left with a broken heart
- In contrast, Elinor defends Edward Ferrars, who has been implicated in an unwanted engagement
–> Clip from movie adaptation from 1995,
Emma Thompson & Kate Winslet, dir. Joe
Wright

QUOTE:
Marianne: “How have I delighted, as I walked,
to see them driven in showers about me by the
wind! … Now there is no one to delight in them!”
Elinor: “It is not everyone that has your passion
for dead leaves.”

22
Q

What is the basic idea of “the sublime” in Romantic poetry?

Do you find any examples of an aesthetic of the sublime in contemporary culture? What would it stand for today?

A

.

23
Q
  • Frankenstein’s monster, Ivanhoe or rather,
    Robin Hood…
  • The female figures of Jane Austen…
    … a lot of the texts we have talked about today are prevalent in popular culture of the 20th century, sometimes also the 21st century – why would you think were they so popular, and sometimes still are?
A

.

24
Q

the Victorian Era, general

A
Empire: Largest extension of British Empire in
its history
▪ Science: Darwin
▪ Industrialisation
▪ Technology: Photography, Engineering,
Machinisation
▪ Modernity: Social Questions - Dickens
▪ Pre-Raphaelitism
▪ Medievalism / Neo-Gothic
Albert
▪  of Sachsen-Coburg
▪ 9 children
▪ Died 1861, aged 42
▪ Innovator and reformer
▪ Best known for the organization
of the Great Exhibition 1851
Queen Victoria
▪ During her reign, British Empire
achieved its largest extension
▪ Empress of India
▪ Capitalism
▪ Industrialization
▪ Culture of chastity and mourning: she
was a widow most her life

INDUSTRIALISATION:
steel, coal, manufacturing, engineering
Urbanization/”Slumification”

"Victorian Values"
▪ Moral rigidity
▪ Woman as “The Angel in the House”, man as provider
▪ Manners and Social Strata
▪ Strong Work Ethics
▪ Heroics of Work and the Everyday (Carlyle)
▪ Duty to Work, Family, the Nation
▪ Militaristic, Self-Sacrifice
▪ Growing Social Consciousness

Darwin
▪ The Origin of Species, 1859
- Intense public and intellectual debate
- Huxley vs. Wilberforce debate 1860 (science vs. religion)

Buildings an Empirial Identity
Development of New Media and Medial Forms
Commercialism and Consumerism
Print Culture: Periodical
–> Britain becomes a “mediated society”:
Increasingly experiences its social life, culture, knowledge through media products

Especially important for: fiction and non-fiction prose
▪ Development of the serialization of narratives, esp. novels
▪ New short forms
▪ Essays etc
▪ Development of genre fiction (ghost story, detective story, sensationalism etc)

25
Q

Tennyson: In Memoriam, A.H.H. (1850)

A

▪ Closest friend of Tennyson, Arthur Henry
Hallam, died age 22 in 1833
▪ Long sequence of 131 lyrics / sections
▪ Lyrics in the shape of several quatrains with
“abba” rhyme scheme
▪ A “poetic therapy”, grappling with deep grief
▪ Asking philosophical questions about doubt,
faith, religion and belief, evolution…
▪ Aspects of queering the speaker (VI)

26
Q

Browning: My Last Duchess

A

(1842)
▪ Performative and theatrical nature of identity
▪ The Dramatic Monologue
▪ Not a lyrical “I”, but a persona is speaking the poem
▪ Has elements of dramatic set-up within the speech
▪ In this case: a Renaissance Duke, in front of a portrait of his deceased wife
▪ Throughout the poem, reader gradually
realises he killed her

Possibly based on actual story of Isabella de’ Cosimo de Medici, c.1574

Even had you skill
In speech—which I have not—to make your will
Quite clear to such an one, and say, “Just this
Or that in you disgusts me; here you miss,
Or there exceed the mark”—and if she let
Herself be lessoned so, nor plainly set
Her wits to yours, forsooth, and made excuse—
E’en then would be some stooping; and I choose
Never to stoop. Oh, sir, she smiled, no doubt,
Whene’er I passed her; but who passed without
Much the same smile? This grew; I gave commands;
Then all smiles stopped together. There she stands
As if alive.

27
Q

The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood

A

▪ First Avantgarde Art movement, created by art students in 1848
▪ “Ut Pictora Poeisis”: painting poetry, writing images
▪ Combination of the artforms
▪ Great “Tennyson fans”
▪ Steeped in medievalism on the one hand, a new aesthetics on the other hand
▪ Obsession with the visual, miniature detail
▪ Became very influential in the aesthetics of the second half of 19th century / fin de siècle

Important names:
▪ William Holman Hunt
▪ John Everett Millais
▪ Dante Gabriel Rossetti
▪ William Morris
▪ Christina Rossetti
▪ Algernon Swinburne (“fleshly school of
poetry”)
▪ “Narrative” painting: Millais, Ophelia, 1851
28
Q

Discussion Questions: Victorian Poetry

▪ From what you know about Victorian poetry… were the Victorians maybe only “3rd generation Romantics”?

▪ If you had to sum it up, how is Victorian
poetry different from Romantic poetry?

______
Culture
▪ The Theory of natural selection and evolution, the idea that there had been species that were now extinct, and others had developed, was deeply unsettling for Victorians.
▪ Why, do you think, did Darwin’s work create such an immense “cultural Angst”?

A

.

29
Q

Romanticism - Poetry

Who are its main protagonists in the genre of poetry?

A

Traditional Canon of Romantic Poets
▪ 1st generation:
Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge

  • -> At first, enthusiastic supporters of French revolution, Blake: abolition fighter
  • -> Innovators, trying to bring out a new form of poetic expression that looks for links in the far European past, re-valuates the local and rural
  • -> Transcendental and mystic connections
  • -> Intense emotional reactions to nature – but also to injustice…

Sensibility as a natural “moral compass”
▪ Emotion and Feeling might lead to more “humane” decisions in life than reason alone (reaction to the “cold logic” of some Enlightenment thought)
▪ Based on Rousseau’s assumption that there is sth. like a “natural state” of the human being, and that humans in their natural state are “good” –> direct contradiction to English early Enlightenment thought (Hobbes)
–> Sensibility, Philanthropy and Benevolence

_________
“Young Radicals”
▪ 2nd generation:
Byron, Shelley, Keats

  • -> Born after the French revolution
  • -> Much more radical political ideas, promoting Independence movements in Europe, atheism
  • -> Cynicism, alienation, human darkness
  • -> Complex characters: Byronic Hero, as established in Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (1812), Manfred (1819)
  • -> Idolisation of Byron, who was a celebrity before and after his death

Transgression, Strangeness, Darkness

  • “The Gothic”
  • Interest in excess (esp. Byron and Shelley)
  • Narcotics
  • The Exotic / Oriental
30
Q

Romanticism - Poetry

What are typical topics and styles?

A

NATURE
Nature and “the sublime”:
▪ Nature in its awe-inspiring form, which evokes both terror and fascination
▪ The Alps as prototype, but also storms, massive trees, waterfalls, glaciers, shipwrecks…
▪ Creating a feeling of being overwhelmed
–> Link to bringing forth revolution
–> Showing the instability of human order

___
NATURE and emotions

By experiencing nature, the human being experiences him/herself

▪ The “outside” of nature, as it is without stable cultural / civilizational signification, becomes the mirror of the “inside” of the wanderer, f.e
▪ Making possible a transcendent experience of “oneness” with all creation

“I wandered lonely as a cloud…”
Tintern Abbey

_______
the GOTHIC
▪ An aestheticized evocation of an imaginary “medieval” quality in buildings, artworks, stories and settings:
▪ Connotation of a “before”, before the Renaissance, Reformation and Scientific revolution: irregularity, “barbaric”, disordered
▪ In literature, texts which evokes such “disordered” feelings by effects of
▪ Terror
( Poplawski 297 )

______
the ORIENTAL
▪ Orientalism (Edward Said, 1978)

▪ Like nature, the “other”, located in the East, becomes defined as everything that is unmodern, “barbaric” etc., that defines what the West is not
▪ Even if this was valued positively in the Romantic age, it essentialised Eastern cultures and leaves a difficult legacy of how our imaginaries of “the Other” work
▪ First deeper European research interest into Levantine, Arabic and Asian cultures
▪ “Oriental Renaissance”: growing fascination with Eastern languages and philosophies; but also simply fashion, fabrics, design
▪ The Thousand and One Arabian Nights were translated from 1704
▪ The East came to signify the sensual, magical, non-rational, despotic, cruel
▪ Eastern knowledge as “deeper” knowledge

_____

EXAMPLES
Humanity “Enslav’d”
William Blake:
▪ “Visions of the Daughters of Albion”, 1793
- Blake had already long been active in the abolitionist movements, friend and supporter of Mary Woolstonecraft (1st feminist thinker)
- The focal character, Oothoon, is represented as a slave, raped, beaten, punished
- The poem transgresses the slavery theme by the establishment of similarities:
- Like black slaves, all women are suppressed by the rules of society which disable their abilities and make them solely dependent on the goodwill of fathers / husbands
- Like black slaves, the English are suppressed by the rigid demands of the Puritan codes (work, self-discipline, guilt when doing things for pleasure)
- Political, Economical and ideological systems make everyone unfree, disable human capacities for altruism, joy, love; being fully human

____
Nature
William Wordsworth: “Tintern Abbey” (1798)
The development of “learning” from nature throughout his life:
- Physical joy
- Passionate, overwhelming feelings (sensuality)
- Sense and Thought joined together
- The importance of nature as a source for understanding self & world

  • -> Mood of Remembering Experience of Nature
  • -> Epiphany

Influential image/idea
- American Renaissance / transcendentalism, Ralph Waldo Emerson in “Nature” (1836):

“ I become a transparent eyeball – I am nothing, I see all”.

The idea of an “original” relation to the universe, mediated only by nature.

_____
Oriental
Samuel Coleridge: “Kubla Khan” (1816)

▪ “Meta-poetry”: a poem about how the creation of poetry works (in the Romantic understanding) – imagination / inspiration
▪ Vision of an unspecified imaginary tartar “China”
▪ “A vision in a dream”: the whole poem came to him while falling asleep under prescribed pain-killer influence: opium.

31
Q

Fin de Siecle

A

Key points aestheticism
Oscar Wilde
Fabianism and Femininism

Fin de Siècle / Aestheticism (around
1900)
▪ Fabianism: early socialism
▪ Woman Question: suffragettes
▪ Popular Culture: increasing…
▪ …Diversification
▪ Dandyism: Aestheticism
▪ “Jugendstil”: Beginning of movements for “organic” life-styles

KEY POINTS
▪ Art for art’s sake: severing of art and moral message
▪ Beauty becomes a goal in itself
▪ Certain markers and codes for the aesthetic kind of
beauty (the peacock feather, the sunflower,
Japanese aesthetics)
▪ In Lit: Oscar Wilde
▪ Partially, also a critical impulse: a re-evaluation of the
hand crafted in opposition to the mass-produced
▪ Value of the labour of the craftsman
→ Critique of urban industrialism and materialism

OSCAR WILDE (1854-1900)
• Salome (1891)
• The Importance of
Being Earnest (1895)
• The Picture of Dorian
Grey (1890)
• De Profundis (1905)
  • Born to upper class Anglo-Irish parents
  • Writes fairy-tales, poetry, essays, parables, goes on
    lecture series in the US
  • Becomes London’s most famous playwright in the 1890s
  • Is convicted for “gross indecency” under antihomosexuality
    laws to great public scandal
  • Dies sick and impoverished in Paris
\_\_\_\_
Social Movements: FABIANISM
▪ The “Fabian Society” founded in 1884
▪ “mild” form of centralist socialists
▪ Want to reach a government form of
democratic socialism via reforms, not
revolution
▪ Push for social reforms, criticism, push for
worker education
▪ Many writers involved, f.e.:
George Bernard Shaw, Beatrix Potter, H.G.
Wells

___
Social Movements: The WOMAN QUESTION
▪ Suffragette movement
▪ Women’s Right To Vote: Movements start in Manchester in 1867
▪ Emmeline Pankhurst & her daughters, leaders of the WSPU (Women’s Social and Political Union), since 1903
▪ Increasingly militant protest of women puts pressure on ruling parties to grant women voting rights (hunger
strikes & property demolitions)
→ the rigid Victorian gender hierarchy is
starting to be attacked – but the status
quo attacks back fiercely.

Also…..
H.G. Wells, A Modern Utopia, 1905
▪ A second earth, where everything and
everyone has a “duplicate”
▪ Centralised “world state”, sole landowner
▪ Nearly no manual labour: “there appears to
be no limit to the invasion of life by the
machine”
▪ Extensive discussion of gender relations,
women supposed to be “as free as men”
▪ Led by “the Samurai”
▪ Rigid ordering of human types according to
ability, with the creative ones ranked highest

___
Falkenhanyer book Tip:
▪ A. S. Byatt, The Children’s Book, 2009
▪ Novel that follows several entangled artist
families from 1895 through to after World War
I
▪ Opens the panoply of possibility for futures
that were developed at the end of the 19th
century, and how they were smashed by the
war

32
Q

Modernism

A

▪ Key points
▪ T.S. Eliot / Ezra Pound (poetry)
▪ Virginia Woolf / James Joyce (novel)

Modernism:
▪ What is truly modern literary form?
▪ Shedding Victorian values: psychology and
sexuality → Freud, Jung, later, Lacan
▪ Experiment in form
▪ Changing relations between sexes, classes
▪ Experiences of trauma: mechanised warfare
is a cultural shock
→ How can one write literature now?
▪ The end of old certainties
▪ multiperspectivity

Modernism: Not only a literary movement
▪ The next “big thing” after Romanticism?
→Like during R, political rifts change people’s
perception of and relation to their life and
surroundings
→Feeling that old values and forms don’t fit
anymore
→Writing openly about sexuality
→Psychoanalysis as an important influence
→drives and subconsciousness
→a culture of acceleration

Differentiations and sub-strands
▪ High Modernism (Eliot, Pound, Woolf,
Joyce, Richardson, Stein)
▪ American Modernism (Hemingway, Dos
Passos, Fitzgerald)
Substrands:
▪ Naturalism
▪ Futurism
▪ Cubism
▪ Imagism
▪ Vorticism
▪ Expressionism
▪ Surrealism
\_\_\_\_\_
Literary modernism – key concepts
▪ Generally, “non-realist” techniques
▪ All Victorian “certainties” are questioned
“the experimental and innovative literature of the period roughly between 1890 and 1939” 
“traditionally, critics have emphasised formal or technical experimentation over newness of theme or content”
→ Box in Poplawski, 497

TWO MAIN TYPES
▪ Experimental Modernism: poetic density,
extensive use of metaphor, analogy, cultural
references, different forms of expression of
perception
▪ Traditional Social Realism: transparency of
meaning, preference for use of metonomy or
‘simple’ metaphor (Crown for Queen)
▪ Mixtures of both types

High Modern Poets:
constructivism of language and reality
T.S. Eliot (1888-1965)
- Relies heavily on mythical symbols
- Changes in sentence structures or unusal connections of registers defy clear
referentiality
- No logical narratives but
- Ambiguity
- Shifts of meaning

IMPORTAN WORKS T.S.ELIOT
▪ “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (1915)
▪ “The Waste Land” (1922)
▪ “The Hollow Men” (1925)
▪ “Ash-Wednesday” (1927)
▪ “Four Quartets” (1936-1942)
▪ Also, large body of essays, talks and literary criticism

____

Ezra Pound (1888-1965)
▪ The modernist “sage”: The ABC of Reading (1934)
▪ A redevelopment of what poetic reading (and writing) means / can be
▪ Poetry as the acute expression of one
moment
▪ Draws inspiration out of non-Western poetic traditions (India, Japan → “in a station of the metro”, 1913)
▪ Discredited because he became a fascist, deeply anti-Semitic

\_\_\_\_\_
High Modern Novelists
▪ James Joyce (1882-1941)
▪ The Dubliners (1914)
▪ Finnegan’s Wake (1939)
▪ ULYSSES (1922)
▪ The day of Leopold Bloom,
June 16 1904
→ “real time” novel
→ Stream of consciousness
→ Stylistic frame similar to Eliot’s
poetry (esp. The Waste Land)
→ Intertext to the Odyssey

STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS
- a persons’s thoughts and conscious reactions to events, perceives as a continuous flow. The term was introduced by William James in Principles of Psychology (1890)
- a literay style in which a character’s thoughts, feelings, and reactions are depicted in a continuous flow uninterrupted by objective description or conventional dialogue. James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Marcel Proust are among its notable early exponents.
__

VIRGINIA WOOLF
▪ Novelist
▪ Essayist
▪ Cultural critique
▪ Publisher
▪ Feminist
--> A Room of One’s Own (1929)
IMPORTANT WORKS
▪ Mrs Dalloway (1925)
▪ To the Lighthouse (1927)
▪ Orlando (1928)
▪ The Waves (1931)
▪ Between the Acts (1941)
33
Q

The Importance of Being Earnest

WIlde

A
THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING ERNEST
1895
- John Worthing, caring guardian of
orphaned rich Gewndolyn, living in a
stately countryhouse, invents fictious
brother “Earnest” to lead a care-free
dandyish double-life in London
- This leads to quite some chaos
- Basic structure of the comedy of
manners
- Makes fun of many mores and morals of
Victorian society, especially via the
character of Lady Augusta
→ Modern impulse to shun and ironize
Victorian culture
→ Samuel Butler, Erewhon, 1872
→ George Bernard Shaw’s plays
34
Q

The Waste Land by T.S.Eliot

A

1922

▪ Structural complexity
▪ Shifts between different times, places,
speakers
▪ Connects personal, seemingly everyday
experiences with such of mythical magnitude
and nature
▪ Uses different languages, high / low register
▪ What is “the waste land”?

35
Q

To the Lighthouse by Woolf

A

1927

▪ Set in 2 days, 10 years apart
▪ Ramsay family’s trip to the lighthouse,
anticipation / reflection
▪ Creative struggle of painter Lily Briscoe
amidst family chaos and drama
▪ Life in and atmosphere of a nation at war
▪ Male figures lean emotionally on the female
ones
▪ Written in inner monologues (→ s.o.c.)

36
Q

Post -45

A
▪ Angry Young Men
▪ Kitchen Sink
▪ Theatre of the Absurd
▪ Rise of political and social equality
▪ Realistic techniques
▪ Social criticism
▪ Loss of Empire
▪ Beginning of Multi-Ethnic Britain
▪ Rise of Popular Culture

SUM UP
▪ Growing dominance of popular culture
▪ Poetry: Social realism vs “new universalism”
▪ Theatre, novel, film: social realism vs
absurdity
▪ Society:A new kind of society predicated on
social democratic ideals, but financially /
economically increasingly precarious
▪ Youth cultures
▪ Loss of empire

________

Britain after WW2

▪ WWII: “Britain’s Finest Hour”, defeating
Germany, but bankrupt (Churchill?)
▪ Falling apart of Empire, 1947: Indian
independence
▪ Festival of Britain 1951: took place a century after the Victorian Great Exhibition in the Crystal Palace, and was meant to be a similar landmark event
▪ Elizabeth II was crowned in 1953, live
broadcast, first ceremonial television media event

Start of post imperial migration waves towards Britain, first from the Caribbean, then Subcontinent, African countries

Britain loses its status as world power

THE NOVEL AFTER 1945
▪ Mostly realist, social criticism
▪ “Angry Young Men” novelists: criticise that
change and reform of British social system
did not go far enough
▪ John Braine Room at the Top (1957)
▪ Alan Sillitoe Saturday Night and Sunday
Morning (1958)
▪ Kingsley Amis Lucky Jim (1954)
▪ New “moral” novels:
▪ Graham Greene The Quiet American (1955)
→ Conflict in Indochina, American involvement there
▪ William Golding Lord of the Flies (1954)
→ re-writing of the Victorian genre of the boys’ adventure novel, notably Ballantyne’s The Coral Island (1857).

▪ Also important start in 1960s: feminist writing / “women’s writing”, Doris Lessing, The Golden Notebook, 1962
▪ importance of Women’s Movement in 1960s and 70s; explicitly feminist writers of 70s: Zoe Fairbairns, Fay Weldon
▪ publishing houses for women’s writing
founded: The Women’s Press, Virago

Rise of youth and counter
cultures, anti Vietnam
protests, ‘free love’, Beatles,
Stones,Stones,“Sex, drugs, Rock’n
Roll”

____
Drama from 1945-1960s
▪ Dominance of London
▪ West End theatres
▪ National Theatre, Royal Shakespeare Company commission
plays, further young playwrights
▪ ‘Angry Young Men’ in Drama:
▪ John Osborne, Look Back in Anger (1956)
▪ ‘Kitchen Sink’ Drama:
▪ Shelagh Delaney (A Taste of Honey, 1958), Arnold Wesker
(Chicken Soup with Barley, 1958; The Kitchen, 1959).
→ Working and lower middle class domestic realism, class conflict,
gender conflicts, connection of private and politcal

THEATRE OF THE ABSURD
▪ Influence of Bertold Brecht, esp. on John
Arden, Sergeant Musgrave’s Dance (1959)
▪ Antonin Artaud
▪ Existentialism of Jean Paul Sartre, Albert
Camus
→Plays that focus on the inability to express
meaningful lives, to have a purpose in life
→nihilism
▪ Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot (1952/4) –
genre defining play of absurdist theatre
▪ Harold Pinter: “Pinteresque”
▪ 1957: The Room and The Dumb Waiter: threat: an
anonymous force breaking into a seemingly secure
place
▪ 1959: The Caretaker: a tramp invading the world of
two brothers and breaking it apart
▪ an element of threat – “comedies of menace”

THEATRE AS PROVOCATION
▪ 1968 trial against Penguin Publishers, Lady
Chatterley’s Lover: near abandonment of
censorship laws
→Violence and sex become possible on stage
→Edward Bond, Saved (1965)
→John Orton, Entertaining Mr. Sloane (1964),
Loot (1965) What the Butler Saw (1969),

____

Poetry after 1945_ anti-modernism

▪ Dylan Thomas: emotional existentialism,
excess of feeling
Dylan Thomas, “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night” (1951/1952)

▪ MOVEMENT-poets: Larkin, Robert
Conquest’s Anthology New Lines (1956):
parochial, domestic topic, accessibility
Philip Larkin, “Coming” “Talking in Bed”

▪ Ted Hughes: poet laureate from 1985,
vitalistic, nature, mythology, influence on
Seamus Heaney
Ted Hughes “Examination at the Womb Door” (fromCrow )

37
Q

Post-Modernism 1968-

A
▪ No stable meaning
▪ No stable form
▪ Meta-literary forms
▪ Non-linearity
▪ Unreliable narration
▪ Questioning of “grand narratives” of history
and science
▪ Stress on the constructedness of abstract
notions deemed fundamental in previous
periods
▪ 1. Postmodernism – what is it?
▪ 2. Key Features in Fiction
▪ 3. Postmodern British Novels
Trends in
▪ 4. Drama (to 1990)
▪ 5. Poetry: Seamus Heaney (1939-2013)

_____
What is it?
… like modernism, less a temporal than an aesthetic category, but is still often used as such (in the sense of late-capitalist)
… not only a literary category, but also
pertaining to art, architecture, etc.
CAVE: Postmodernism shares features with / is influenced by and influences, but is NOT the same as poststructuralism as a movement in cultural critique and literary and cultural theory!!!

AGE OR STYLE?
“There are clearly a number of definitions of the
‘postmodern’ in operation here. The first is
linked to the branding, dilution (under the guise
of accessibility) and commodification of
intellectual and creative activity which have
become key features of the ‘postmodern’ era.
The second relates to the formal and
conceptual features of ‘postmodernism’ as it
has developed in relation to other disciplines
such as architecture and the visual arts.” Redell
Olson, “Postmodern Poetry in Britain

“The Postmodern is often equated mistakenly with the contemporary, and those writers who are committed to
the idea of […] art having a referential function, are seen as lagging behind the times. This notion of the relationship between realism, modernism and postmodernism as a series of progressive stages in literary
history should be resisted.” (Poplawski 570)

→ BUT: Decidedly strong trend in British novels especially in the 1970s and 1980s, becomes less dominant from later 1990s. English Post-Modernism tends to be more accessible to general audience than French / Italian postmodern texts

EXAMPLE
Monty Python, “Hamlet”, 1974
▪ Quotation, imitation, juxtaposition of texts of different origins
▪ intertextuality / intermediality
▪ Makes fun of “grand tradition” → Hamlet
▪ Debunking heroes, traditions, received truths
▪ Defying a “real” sense of meaning
▪ Making fun of the idea of the “real” (“I’m a real psychiatrist”)

_____
2. key features in fiction

▪ Link to structuralism / poststructuralism: the relationship between signifier and signified is arbitrary / formed by tradition (Saussure) →
This link is in fact unfixed (Derrida), meaning therefore is perpetually deferred and always liminal
→ A hub to question the way things are, are presented to always have been, should be…

…an opening venue for textual play
▪ Word play
▪ Intertextuality and intermediality
▪ Pastiche (playful imitation of styles and
genres)
▪ Metanarrative: authorial voice comments on
own narration, metalepsis (jumps between
narrative levels)
▪ Metafiction: play with what one perceives as
“real” and the imaginary

\_\_\_\_
3- British Novels
John Fowles: The French Lieutenant’s
Woman (1969)
▪ Metahistorical novel
▪ Pastiche of a Victorian novel
▪ Metanarrative devices

J. G. Ballard: The Atrocity Exhibition
(1970)
▪ Fully experimental collection of “condensed novels” or short stories / vignettes that were all published individually before in journals
▪ Protagonist changes his name (Talbert,
Traven, Travis, Talbot)
▪ Fully immersing himself in media events, protagonist gives over to psychosis
▪ Notes by the author on the margins in later editions, illustrations

Intermediality in Ballard

___
Mediatization: author’s note to “The
Enormous Face”
“A unique collision of private and public fantasy
took place in the 1960s, and may have to wait
some years to be repeated, if ever. The public
dream of Hollywood for the first time merged
with the private imagination of the hyperstimulated
60s TV viewer”
→ Simulacra (Baudrillard): experiences of
copies without originals
__
Martin Amis: London Fields (1989)
▪ “This book is a cheat. A con-trick. From start
to finish, all 470 pages of it, it’s an elaborate
tease. A whodunnit without a motive. A
meditation on the way the world ends which
turns out to be just another metaphor for the writing of fiction.” (review in The Guardian)

\_\_\_\_
4. Drama
▪ Tom Stoppard → drama with postmodern
elements
▪ Rosecrantz and Güldenstern are Dead (1966)
▪ Arcadia (1993)
▪ Shakespeare in Love (screenplay, 1998)
Other Trends until 1990 in drama
▪ Peter Shaffer
▪ Alan Ayckborn
▪ Christopher Hampton
▪ Patrick Marber
▪ Female playwrights (from 1980s)
▪ Caryl Churchill, Top Girls (1982)
▪ Commercial theatre: London West End
Musical Industry (Andrew Lloyd Webber)
--> Cats
- Premiered in 1981
- Based on T.S. Eliot’s
Poem collection “Old
Possum’s Book of
Practical Cats” (1931)
- Transformed into a
million dollar
business
(407.7 million $ on
Broadway alone)
\_\_\_\_
5. Poetry
▪ Dominant Poetic Voice: Seamus Heaney
(1939-2013)
▪ Irish
▪ Influenced by Ted Hughes
▪ Nature, History, Memory
▪ “Bog Poems” (1975): the Iron-Age bog
mummies, become metaphors for Ireland
being punished as the bodies of the dead
women where in their time
▪ New English translation of Beowulf (1999)