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Literature and History (4): Cultural Materialism

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Title: Literature and History (4): Cultural Materialism


1
Literature and History (4)Cultural Materialism
  • Shakespearean Discourses

2
Starting Questions
  • What is Discourse according to Foucault?
  • Why is history textualized?
  • What do you think about the first lecture quoted
    in our textbook, chap 2(pp. 236-237)?
  • What is New Historicism?
  • How about Cultural Materialism? Cultural
    Poetics?

3
Outline
  • Cultural Materialism
  • e.g. 1 Browns reading of The Tempest
  • e.g. 2 Barker, et als reading of The Tempest
  • e.g. 3 Shakespeare and Education
  • History as Time Travel and Costume Drama
  • Your Journal Possible Approaches
  • References

4
Cultural Materialism
  • a literary criticism that places texts in a
    material, that is socio-political or historical,
    context in order to show that canonical texts,
    Shakespeare supremely, are bound up with a
    repressive, dominant ideology, yet also provide
    scope for dissidence.
  • examines ideas and categorize them as radical or
    non-radical according to whether they contribute
    to a historical vision of where we are and where
    we want to be. (Wilson 35-36).

5
Example (1) Paul Browns reading of The Tempest
  • Instead of aesthetic harmony, truth and
    coherence, he sees the text as
  • riven with contradictions which bear the traces
    of social conflicts.
  • an intervention in contemporary colonialist
    practices
  • Foregrounds what it seeks to cover (conflicts in
    colonialist ideologies).

6
An example Paul Browns reading of The Tempest
(2)
Kermode Prospero a disciplined artist Césaire Caliban is the productive natural man, the slave that creates history.
Brown does not do a humanist reading of the characters. Instead, he -- sets The Tempest in the context of contemporary colonial discourses of sexuality, masterlessness and savagism. -- Caliban unifies the heterogeneous discourses of masterlessness, savagism and sexuality. Brown does not do a humanist reading of the characters. Instead, he -- sets The Tempest in the context of contemporary colonial discourses of sexuality, masterlessness and savagism. -- Caliban unifies the heterogeneous discourses of masterlessness, savagism and sexuality.
7
Example (1) Paul Browns reading of The Tempest
(3)
  • discourses of sexuality John Rolfe and
    Pocahontas (1614) . .. The strive with all his
    body is in no way led . . . With the unbridled
    desire of carnal affection but for the good of
    this plantation, for the honour of our countrie,
    for the glory of God, for my own salvation, and
    for the converting to the true knowledge of God
    and Jesus Christ, an unbeleeving creature, namely
    Pocahontas (Brown 49)
  • masterlessness Look Upon me London (1613)
  • Savagism e.g. the Irish 1) as beast-like,
    requirement the management of the British
    husbandman. 2) with natural simplicity. (without
    any qualities of civility)

8
Example (1) Paul Browns contradictions and
ambiguities
  • Prosperos island Ireland, placed between the
    American and the European discourse
  • The play produces colonial stereotypes which
    refuse to be contained.
  • E.g. Prosperos education of Miranda (e.g. the
    romance trope in Prosperos speech?
    powerlessness)
  • Ariel freed only to be bound
  • The plays class hierarchy and aesthetic ordering
    as euphemization (e.g. colonization as education,
    colonialist re-organization as family romance).
  • Calibans my island speech desire for power
    and powerlessness
  • Prosperos dream speech colonialist narrative
    revealed as forgery. ? yet he goes on.

9
Example (2) Barker, et al.
  • To de-mystify contemporary Shakespeare --as shown
    in
  • midsummer tourism at Stratford-upon-Avon ?
    construction of an English past which is
    picturesque, familiar and untroubled.
  • Arden series of Shakespeare (eternal values of
    the texts vs. their historical backgrounds)
  • through examining his intertextuality or thrus
    con-textualization.

10
Example (2) Barker, et al. (2)
  1. the inter-textual relations between Prosperos
    versions of history with that of Ariels,
    Mirandas and Calibans
  2. The moment of disturbance when Prospero calls a
    sudden halt to the celebratory mask. ? the real
    dramatic moment because Prospero is anxious to
    keep the sub-plot of his play in its place.

11
Contemporary Shakespearean Discourses in UK
as a ground for discrimination
  • GCE (General Certificate Exam) A level at least
    one Shakespeare play
  • Those on GCE O level and CSE (Certificate of
    Secondary Education) should be steered away from
    Shakespeare (Sinfield 138)

12
Contemporary Shakespearean Discourses in UK
forming a hegemony?
  • According to a survey done in 1968, only 1/8 of
    800 level students showed any wish to keep on
    reading literature
  • Most of the A and O level students have light
    private readings. (Sinfield 137)

13
Contemporary Shakespearean Discourses in UK
exam questions
  • At the center of King Lear lies the question,
    What is a man? Discuss.
  • The Winters Tale is much more concerned with
    the qualities of womanhood, its virtue, its
    insight, and its endurance. Discuss.
  • Compare Shakespeares treatment of the problem
    of evil in any two plays (Sinfield 138-39.

14
History as Time Travel as Costume Drama
  • To read the past, to read a text from the past,
    is thus always to make an interpretation which is
    in a sense an anachronism (????). Time travel is
    a fantasy. We cannot reproduce the conditions .
    . . of another century. To do so would be, in
    any case, to eliminate the difference that makes
    the fantasy pleasurable. . . .

15
History as Time Travel as Costume Drama (2)
  • The real anachronism, then, is of another kind.
    Here history as time travel gives way to history
    as costume drama, the reconstruction of the past
    as the present in fancy dress. The project is to
    explain away the surface strangeness of another
    century in order to release its profound
    continuity with the present (C. Belsey qtd
    Wilson 13)

16
Your Journal Possible Approaches
  • choose a text to study its interaction (under a
    certain subject) with its authors life and its
    society (rules, norms and socio-economic
    conditions). The text can be contained or
    controlled by its conditions, but it can also
    intervene in it actively by utilizing different
    and conflicting discourses consciously or
    unconscious
  • Stories of time travel, its historical methods
    and underlying ideologies
  • Discuss one of the views of history, time, truth,
    culture, discourse, and/or their interactions,
    discussed in class and give examples to support
    your argument.

17
References
  • Alan Sinfield, "Give an Account of Shakespeare
    and Education . . . ," in Dollimore and Sinfield,
    Political Shakespeare. Eds. Jonathan Dollimore,
    Alan Sinfield. Methuen 1984 134-57.
  • This thing of Darkness I acknowledge mine The
    Tempest and the Discourse of colonialism.
    Political Shakespeare.
  • Barker, Francis and Peter Hume. Nymphs and
    Reapers Heavily Vanish The Discursive Con-texts
    of the Tempest. Kiernan Ryan (ed.), New
    historicism and cultural materialism a
    reader(London and New York Arnold, 1996).
  • Scott Wilson. Cultural Materialism Theory and
    Practice. Blackwell Publishers, 1995.
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