"The Literature of Replenishment--Postmodernist Fiction"
Provider:
Jerry Liang / ±ç¥@³Ç;
Nov. 19, 1998
There is no clear definition for the term "postmodernism"
and for the characteristics of "postmodernist fiction" in this era, and
some scholars claim that postmodernism is the extension or the opposition
of modernism in a way. In this essay, John Barth show his disagreement
with this notion, and at the same time he also point out his liking of
some qualities of literature of the last century. However, he does not
really wants to get rid of all elements of modernism in postmodernist
fiction, and he does not want to trace back to the ancient traditions
completely either. Synthesis is the ideal way for postmodernist
writer and fiction.
I. Some general ideas of postmodernism and postmodernist fiction 2. or define, or redefine, that predominant aesthetic of Western literature in the first half of this century. "Over the past two decades, as the high tide of modernism ebbed and its master died off. . ." But there is no proceeding definition of the ensuing low tide, postmodernism. C. Professor Ihab Hassan: 2. For Alter, Hassan and other postmodernist, postmodernist fiction merely emphasis the 'performing' self-consciousness and self-reflexiveness of modernism, in a spirit of cultural and anarchy. It is more and more about itself and its process, less about objective reality and life. 2. For Graff, postmodernist fiction is also anti-rationalist, anti-realist, and anti-bourgeois programme. But the difference is he gets rid of certain postmodernist satire as managing to be vitalized by the same kitschy society that is its target. II. The characteristics of modernism: A. Graff's check list of modernism: This checklist in some way is the criticism of the 19th century bourgeois social order and its world view. .. Its artistic strategy was the self-conscious overturning of the conventions of bourgeois realism by such devices as the substitution of 'mythical' for a 'realistic' method and the manipulation of conscious parallels between contemporaneity and antiquity... .. the radical disruption of the linear flow of narrative .. the frustration of conventional expectation concerning unity and coherence of plot and character and the cause-and-effect "development" thereof .. the development of ironic and ambiguous juxtapositions to call into question the moral and philosophical "meaning" of literary action .. the adoption of a tone of epistemological self-mockery aimed at the naive pretensions of bourgeois rationality .. the opposition of inward consciousness to rational, public, objective discourse .. an inclination to subjective distortion to point up the temporariness of the objective social world of the 19th bourgeoisie .. the modernists' foregrounding of language and technique as opposed to straightforward traditional 'content' e.g. Mann, Flaubert, and Barhes' sum .. James Joyce & Co. set very high standards of artistry, no doubt implicit in their preoccupation with the special remove of the artist from his society .. Difficulty of access (high standards of craftsmanship): anti-linearity, aversion to conventional characterization and cause-and-effect dramaturgy, their celebration of private, subjective experience over public experience, their general inclination to 'metaphoric' as against 'metonymic' means.--it leads to the result of unpopularity. e.g. guide-book needed for understanding the allusion; distant from our world. III. John Barth's disagreement with modernism B. Barth approves the value of 19th century literature. He suggests that suggests we should agree with the commonplace that the rigidities and other limitation of the 19th prompted the great adversary reaction called modernist art. But it (modernist art) belongs to the first half of the century. In this passage we see Barth¡¥s aversion of modernist art and his liking of the 19th century. C. However, Barth does not agree the total repudiation of the enterprise of modernism as if the period never happened. The chart below will help to understand the values of different characteristics of different periods:
IV. Barth's view to postmodernism and postmodernist fiction B. The ideal postmodernist writer neither repudiates nor merely imitate either his 19th and 20th parents. Without falling into moral or artistic simplism, shoddy craftsmanship, or either false or real naivety, he nevertheless aspires to a fiction more democratic in its appeal than such late-modernist marvels. He may not hope to reach and move the devotees of James Michener and Irving Wallace--not to mention the lobotomized mass-media illiterature. But he should hope to reach and delight beyond the circle of what Mann used to call Early Christians: professional devotees of high art. C. Novel is a genre whose historical roots are famously and honorably in middle-class popular culture. The ideal postmodernist novel will rise above the quarrel between realism and irrealism, formalism and 'contentism,' pure and committed literature, coterie and junk literature. It may nor needs so much teaching as Joyce's or Pynchon's books. Barth's analogy--listening to jazz. V. Two examples Barth provides A. Calvino's Cosmicomics as the example of the synthesis .. enormously appealing space-age fable .. the materials are as modern as the new cosmology and as ancient as folktales .. the themes are love and loss, change and permanence, illusion and reality, including a good deal of specially Italian reality .. As a true postmodernist, Calvino keeps one foot always in the narrative past--characteristically the Italian narrative past of Boccaccio, Marco Polo, or Italian fair tales--and one foot in the Parisian structuralist present; one foot in fantasy, one in objective reality B. Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, a great novel not only in the second half of this century, but also would be great in any century. .. synthesis of straitforwardness and artifice, realism and magic and myth, political passion and nonpolitical artistry, characterization and caricature, humor and terror, not only artistically admirable, but also humanly wise, lovable, literally marvelous. People had almost forgotten that new fiction could be so wonderful as well as so merely important. ![]() |
(external)
Literary
Criticism Databank: Postmodernism and Urban Space ;
N. American Postmodern Fiction & Film, Spring
2000
Postmodern Theories and Texts Fall, 1998