Интернет ресурсы. http://andromeda.rutgers.edu.~j

https://andromeda.rutgers.edu.~j

www.britishliterature.com

https://vos.ucsb.edu

Http://englishlit.about.com/arts/englishlit

Тема 14. Modernism, Imagism, Realism.

Проблемные вопросы лекции. The main particularities of English modernism, imagism, further developed realism.

Тезисы лекций. The period of 25 years 1914 -1939 between the outbreak of the First World War and the beginning of the Second World War offered the sharpest possible contrast to the official serenity and complacency of the Victorian era. The IWW, with its almost overwhelming anxieties, sacrifices, and disasters, came as a terrific shock to a society that had felt itself permanently freed from the barbarousness of wholesale destruction of life and devastation of property. The hope and faith that this war was a war to end war and to save the world for democracy furnished the necessary moral justification for four years of suffering and sacrifice.

The military triumph achieved by England and her Allies in 1918 was, however, followed by a period of reaction, at first, hopeful and optimistic, and later, skeptical and cynical. The end of the war created as many problems as it solved. The crusading idealism of the war-period gave way to nationalistic self-seeking and aggrandizement /increase of power/, and the peace-treaty signed at Versailles, while it brought to many small nations opportunities for political and economic self-determination hitherto denied them, was so harshly punitive that it contained within itself as it is now evident, the noxious germs of an even more frightful world-disaster. Growing Skepticism as to the nature of the peace and increased knowledge of the sinister forces that had led to the IWW deepened the sense of disillusionment and betrayal. The passing of the sacrificial mood of the war-period and the sense of release and escape from its horrors encouraged the continuance of the moral weakness inevitable in a social experience as devastating as wholesale warfare, and there developed a general tendency to question the ethical and social ideas and standards of pre-war society. The spurious commercial prosperity of the years immediately after the close of the war encouraged free spending and careless living and an exploitation of self-indulgence and sensuality.

Modern Period. The application of the term ‘modern’, of course, varies with the passage of time, but it is frequently applied specifically to the literature written since the beginning of WW I in 1914. Modernism is widely used to identify new and distinctive features in the subjects, forms, concepts, and styles of lit and other arts in the early decades of the XX century, but especially after WWI 14-18. The specific features vary with the user but many lit critics agree that it involves a deliberate and radical break with some of the traditional bases not only of western art but of western culture in general. Modernism distinguishes experimental writing from the narrative, descriptive and rational frameworks and conventions of 19th.c writing.

Modernism characteristics:

    • The catastrophe of the war had shaken faith in the moral basis, coherence and durability of western civilization and raised doubts about the adequacy of traditional literary modes to represent the harsh realities of the postwar world.
    • It employs a distinctive kind of imagination –solipsism – the idea that only the Self exists or can be known. Modernists believe that they create the world in the act of perceiving it.
    • Modernists adopt those views that reveal the contradictions of capitalistic economic structures. They adopted understanding of ‘human nature’ as a set of universal and eternal, human values.
    • Modernism implies a historical discontinuity, a sense of alienation, loss and despair. The solitude, loneliness of the individual in the ‘crowd’, the alienated self in the urban world.
    • The concept of the artist as hero.
    • The increasing importance attacked to the Freudian unconscious and to the dream work: Modernism elevates the individual and the inward over the social and the outward, and it prefers the unconscious to the self – conscious. Modernist theories defined lit as an expression of inward consciousness set over against the traditional realism.
    • By the time of The Wast Land, the dark side of modernism came to the peak: its suspicion of progress, its hostility toward individualism and modern democracy, its insistence on hierarchy and order and the need for an outer authority to restrain inner self.
    • The superiority of art to nature: the autonomy of art and its divorce from truth or morality, alogical structure; the depersonalization and objectivity of art; the art as the imposition of human order upon inhuman chaos;
    • the replacement of representation of the external world by the imaginative construction of the poet’s inner world via the mysterious symbol;
    • Modernists use of myth as organizing structure, the calling up of unconscious and of archetypes.

Literary historians locate the beginning of the modernist revolt as far back as the 1890, but most agree that what is called high modernism, marked by an unexampled range and rapidity of change, came after the First World War. The year 1922 alone was signalized by the simultaneous appearance of such monuments of modernist innovation as J. Joyes, Ulysses, T.S. Eliot’s the Waste Land, Virginia Woof’s Jacob’s Room as well as many other experimental works of lit. The hard realities of the postwar world needed new literary modes to represent it. Thomas Stearns Eliot (1888-1965), an American who made his home in England. Both have seemed concerned with trying to conserve what is best in European culture before European civilization is finally destroyed. Pound followed Browning and various Italian and French poets of the Middle ages, translated Chinese and Anglo-Saxon, looking for something to build on. He came to fruition of his talent in Hugh Selwyn Mauberley, an autobiographical poem which suns up his position as a poet who detests the civilization of Materialism, and is trying to build up a culture based on the past. Eliot, after satirizing the puritanical world of new England and condemning its philistinism, produced in 1933 an epoch-making poem of some 400 lines, The Waste Land, which set out in a new poetical technique a picture of a materialistic age dying of lack of belief in anything: the solution to the problem of living in such an arid Waste Land of a civilization seemed to be to accept it as a kind of fiery purgation and to gather together such scraps of civilization and faith as have not yet been destroyed; he has given new poetic expression to the modern consciousness. For him, Baudelaire ‘gave new possibilities to poetry in a new stock of images from contemporary life’. As a result, the new poetry of 1910 -1920 looked to the big city for its images rather than the countryside. It nevertheless rejected the values of the commercial

The Waste Land 1922 is a closely organized poem, and not a word is wasted: it repays the trouble spent on it and is, in fact, a sort of door into European lit – a concise summary of a civilization which is contrasted sharply with the present age. Eliot built his poem on the basis of a theme from medieval romance, invested with associations from a great variety of historical and legendary events; he attempted to create a sense of the sordidness and vulgarity, the moral debility and spiritual desiccation of modern life. In the Waste Land he used new poetical technique. This technique coined with the term Objective correlative that was introduced by Eliot into his essay “Hamlet and his Problems. ‘The only way of expressing emotion in the form of art is by finding an ‘objective correlative’ in other words, a set of objects, a situation, a chain of events which shall be the formula of that particular emotion; such that when the external facts…are given the emotion is immediately evoked’.

Eliot’s finest work after The Waste land was the Four Quartets 1935-1942 – four poems organized on the analogy of musical pieces, in which the old concern for European civilization has been changed into a very Christian preoccupation with ‘the intersection of time with the timeless’ – the way in which eternity can redeem the mistakes of history. It consists of 5 parts, and each part is distinguished in tone and mood, in form and style from each of the other parts. the parts, moreover, occur in the same order in each of the poems. Terms and phrases from one poem awaken echoes in the succeeding poems, as in music, themes are stated, repeated, and developed. The major theme is the antithesis between time and the timeless, between time and eternity, and the series of poems rises to its climax in a consideration of the Incarnation, the point of intersection of time and eternity. The technique is remarkable though we notice clearly one characteristic of modern poetry which is frequently condemned – the tendency for verse to sound like prose. In our age the dividing – line between prose and poetry is very thin indeed.

Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) is another novelist hard to classify. She dispenses with plot and even characterization, preferring to analyse in the closest possible detail a mood or thought as presented at a given moment in time. Like Joyce, she uses an interior monologue device to depict ‘the stream of consciousness’ of her characters. She devoted herself to the building up of character through the complexity of consciousness. She saw consciousness, as a complex of sensations, feelings, emotions, and ideas, and she attempted, through her rendition of this complex, to create the sense of being alive. For Mrs. Woolf brought to her work highly individualized gifts – hypersensitivity on the sensory side, refined observation of the process of thought and feeling, and a deep and tender response to the pathetic evanescence of the reality she devoted herself to predicting throughout her fiction. Her prose is careful, exquisitely light, approaching poetry in its power to evoke mood and sensation. Her view of the novel was a comprehensive one; she did not wish to limit herself to the mere story-telling of men like Arnold Bennett and Hugh Walpole, but wanted to see the novel absorb as many literary devices as possible, even, occasionally, to break away from prose and use verse instead. To many readers her novels do not appear to be works of fiction at all: they seem too static, too lacking in action and human interest – a kind of literary form which is neither true poetry nor true prose, neither completely dramatic nor completely lyrical. Perhaps her best works as Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, and The Waves. Orlando is a curious work – it presents a picture of English history from the Renaissance to modern times, as seen through the eyes of a character who is, presumably, immortal and, moreover, changes from hero to heroine exactly half-way through the book!

Imagism was a movement in early 20th-century Anglo-American poetry that favored precision of imagery and clear, sharp language; it was described as the most influential movement in English poetry since the activity of the Pre-Raphaelites.[1] The Imagists rejected the sentiment and discursiveness typical of much Romantic and Victorian poetry. This was in contrast to their contemporaries, the Georgian poets, who were by and large content to work within that tradition. Group publication of work under the Imagist name appearing between 1914 and 1917 featured writing by many of the most significant figures in modernist poetry in English, as well as a number of other modernist figures prominent in fields other than poetry.

Popular realistic novels, by for example, Arnold Bennett (1867-1931) and John Galsworthy (1867-1933) – in which the characters seem to have been wholly shaped by the social environment were written in critical realism. So there were two trends in Novel. According to Virginia Woolf, these novelists were ‘materialists…who spend immense skill and immense industry making the trivial and transitory appear the true and enduring, but there were spiritualist’s writers’; Novels which explore the interrelation between the individual self, the social self and nature – in particular those of D.H. Lawrence, who explored the psychic ills of contemporary society through the inner experience of individuals and their relationships and who looked for more instinctive vitality than could be found in most contemporary society.

Список литературы. Ed. By John Shuttleworth and George Keith. Reading Drama, Hodder & Stoughton, 2001.

Banks R.A., Marson P., Drama and Theatre Arts, Hodder & Stoughton, 1998

Интернет ресурсы. Http://englishlit.about.com/arts/englishlit

www.spartacus.schoonet.co.uk/drama.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

Тема 15. Antiwar theme in the novels of 50-60s of XX century.

Проблемные вопросы лекции. The creative works of G. Greene as the highest achievement of English realism in the post war period. The particularity of G. Greene’s novel The Quiet American. The literature of ‘Angry Young Men’, expression of revolt.

Тезисы лекций. Graham Greene (1904-1999), another Catholic convert, has been obsessed with the problem of good and evil, and his books are a curious compound of theology and stark modern realism. Greene sees the spiritual struggle of man against a background of ‘seedy, crowded’ town life (Brighton Rock) or in the Mexican Jungle (The power and the Glory) or in wartime West Africa (The heart of the Matte r). In this last work, and also in the moving The End of the Affair, Greene shows a concern with the paradox of the man or woman who, technically a sinner is really a saint. Some of his works have conflicted with Catholic orthodoxy (especially in Ireland). The Quiet American, is a political novel set in Indo –China in wartime, showed its hero as not only crassly materialistic but dangerously innocent by reason of his failure to understand other people, he turns to a moral theme – how far are good intentions enough? Graham Greene divides his many books into two groups: serious novels and entertainments. in his serious novels the characters who are failures – in comparison with what they wanted and hoped to do – are seen as being neared God than those who are more successful in worldly ways. Brighton Rock 1938 has at its centre an evil man who thinks he can conquer everything and everyone who stands in his way. He is outside the laws of man, but for Greene only God’s law is strong enough to reach him: his soul can after all be saved because he did love once. The Power and the Glory 1949 one of Green’s strongest novels, tells the story of a priest in South America who is in danger form the forces of the state and has the choice of saving his soul / by continuing to act as a priest/ or his body /ether by escaping or by breaking the promises he made when he became a priest/. He knows very well the weakness of his own nature and this, to Greene, makes him more able to rise to spiritual greatness than a man who had not done so much wrong. Greene’s lighter novels are distinguished by fine construction and admirably terse prose. In both categories, ‘entertainments, like the expert thrillers, This Gun for Hire and The Ministry of Fear and ‘novels’, as Brighton Rock, The Power and the Glory, he is concerned obviously or subtly with evil and its endless conflict with righteousness.

The " angry young men " were a group of mostly working and middle class British playwrights and novelists who became prominent in the 1950s. The group's leading members included John Osborne and Kingsley Amis. The phrase was originally coined by the Royal Court Theatre's press officer to promote John Osborne's 1956 play Look Back in Anger. It is thought to be derived from the autobiography of Leslie Paul, founder of the Woodcraft Folk, whose Angry Young Man was published in 1951. Following the success of the Osborne play, the label was later applied by British media to describe young British writers who were characterized by a disillusionment with traditional English society. The term, always imprecise, began to have less meaning over the years as the writers to whom it was originally applied became more divergent, and many of them dismissed the label as useless.

Look Back in Anger (1956) is a John Osborne play—made into films in 1959, 1980, and 1989—about a love triangle involving an intelligent and educated but disaffected young man of working class origin (Jimmy Porter), his upper-middle-class, impassive wife (Alison), and her haughty best friend (Helena Charles). Cliff, an amiable Welsh lodger, attempts to keep the peace. The play was a success on the London stage, and spawned the term "angry young men" to describe Osborne and those of his generation who employed the harshness of realism in the theatre in contrast to the more escapist theatre that characterized the previous generation.

Список литературы. Alexander M. A History of English Literature, Palgrave Macmillan, 2000

Thornley G.C., Roberts G. An outline of English Literature, Longman, 2002

Drabble M., Stringer J. Oxford Concise Companion to English Literature.

Интернет ресурсы. G. Greene “The Quiet American” https://www.truly-free.org/

https://andromeda.rutgers.edu.~j

www.britishliterature.com

https://vos.ucsb.edu


Понравилась статья? Добавь ее в закладку (CTRL+D) и не забудь поделиться с друзьями:  



double arrow
Сейчас читают про: