Title: Chapter 4 The Age of Realism (1)
1Chapter 4 The Age of Realism (1)
- Representatives
- William Dean Howells
- Henry James
- Mark Twain
2realistic american landscape By waltcurlee on
Flickr
3Contents
- Historical background
- The Civil War
- Post-war development
- In literary scene
4Assignments
- Tell the nature of American realism
- What are the common features shared by then
American realists? - What is William Dean Howells definition for
realism? - State the symbolic meanings of the house in The
Rise of Silas Lapham. - Tell the range of Henry James international
theme. - List the themes in The Jolly Coner.
- The three questions on P100 of the Selected
Readings of American Literature.
5Historical background
- The Civil War
- With the development of Northern
industrialization, the conflict between the North
and South was becoming more and more fierce, and
finally the Civil War broke out. As a result, the
factory defeated the farm, and the United States
headed toward capitalism. The war made many
people question the assumption shared be
Transcendentalists, and marked a change in the
quality of American life, a deterioration of
American moral values.
6II. Post-war development
- After the Civil War, commerce took the lead on
the national economy. - Railroads tripled in 15 years and multiplied five
times in 25, and petroleum was discovered in
sizeable quantities. Industrialization and
mechanization of the country were fully
developing. - Wealth and power were more and more concentrated
in the hands of the few captains of industry
and robber barons, such as, John D.
Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, and J.P.Morgan.
When young, they tried to avoided military
service and made great fortune during the war.
The spirit of self-reliance by Emerson was
perverted into admiration for driving ambition,
and a lust for money and power. Children now were
brought up on the idea that a person with
ambition could make his own world. - The frontier was closing. The worth of American
dream, the idealized romantic view of man and his
life in the New world, began to lose its hold in
the imagination of the people.
7III. In literary scene
- The age of Romanticism and Transcendentalism were
ended Younger writers appeared on the scene.
William Dean Howells, Henry James, and Mark Twain
were becoming established as novelists of no
small talent. - Nature of American realism As a literary movement
realism came in the latter half of the 19th
century as a reaction against the lie of
romanticism and transcendentalism. It expressed
the concern for the world of experience, of the
commonplace, and for the familiar and the low. - The common features of the realists
verisimilitude of detail derived from
observation, the efforts to approach the norm of
experiencea reliance on the representative in
plot, setting and character, and to offer an
objective rather than an ideal view of human
nature and experience. -
8William Dean Howells(1837-1920 )
9Contents
- His life experience (p118)
- His literary position
- His ideas on realism
- His ideas on literary criticism
- His masterpieceThe Rise of Silas Lapham
(p121-p123)
10- His life experience (p118)
- His literary position He was a prolific writer,
writing volumes of drama, poetry, and novels in
addition to criticism, travelogues, and
autobiography, As a critic of eminent standing
and as a prolific writer, he helped to mould
public taste and became the champion of literary
realism of America. It is estimated that he
wrote, in addition to the great number of social
novels, 8 critical books and about 1,700book
reviews to spread the credo of realism.
11His ideas on realism
- His definition of realism He defines realism as
fidelity to experience and probability of
motive, as a quest of the average and the
habitual rather than the exceptional or the
uniquely high or low. - His aim of realism
- to do nothing more than talk of some ordinary
traits of American life - to interpret sympathetically the common feelings
of the common people - to seek man not in his heroic or occasional
phase, but in his habitual moods of vacancy and
tiresomeness - Thus man in his natural and unaffected dullness
was the object of his fictional representatives.
To him, realism is by no means mere photographic
pictures of externals but includes a central
concern with motives and psychological
conflicts. - Defects in his realism
- much of his realism was external characters and
events viewed from without - rarely achieved or sought to achieve
psychological depth - his realism having a smiling aspect, only
saving himself from pessimistic defeatism by his
constructive use of novel to promote brotherly
love .
12His ideas on literary criticism
- The literary critic should not try to impose
arbitrary or subjective evaluations on books but
should follow the detached scientists in accurate
description, interpretation, and classification.
The critics job is to identify the literary
species and explain the weaknesses of a work in
the light of the authors intentions.
13His masterpieceThe Rise of Silas Lapham
14Outline
- Literary position the fine specimen of American
realistic writing. - The symbolic meanings of the house in the novel
(p121-p122) - Understanding of the love subplot (p122-p123)
15Henry James
16Contents
- His life experience
- His literary career
- The influence from other writers on him
- The range of his international theme
- His contributions to literary criticism
- His political and social ideas (p128-p129)
- His political and social ideas (p128-p129)
- Appreciation of his The Jolly Corner
17- His life experience
- His literary career Generally speaking,his
literary career can be divided into 3 periods - In the first period (1865-82), he produced a
number of novels that won him fame and reputation
and reveals his fascination with his
international theme.(The portrait of a Lady) - The second period extends from 1882 to 1895,
in which he dropped his international theme
and wrote his tales of subtle studies of
inter-personal relationships, and plays, which
proved to be failure. - Between 1895 and 1900 he wrote a few novellas
and tales dealing with childhood and
adolescences, which was a revival of his earlier
theme.
18The influence from other writers on him
- George Eliot his ideal of the philosophical
novelist, impressed him by her looking into the
minds and soul of her characters - Turgenev served as a guide for him.
- The French writer, Flaubert and his masterpiece,
Madame Bovary - Hawthorne whose insight into human psyche
impressed him deeply
19The range of his international theme
- the meeting of America and Europe
- American innocence in contact and contrast with
European decadence, and its moral and
psychological complications.
20His contributions to literary criticism
- He developed gradually from early evaluation in
terms of stiff moral standards to inductive
inquiry, flexibility, and a subtle perception of
aesthetic nuances. - Novel primarily has a large, free character of
an immense and exquisite correspondence with
life. The aim of the novel is to represent life.
The air of reality seems to be the supreme
virtue of a novel. - Art without life is a poor affair. The
province of art is all life, all feeling, all
observation, all vision. Though art must be
related to life, art is important in its own way.
It is art that makes life, makes interest, makes
importance. A work of art must lift up the
heart there is no substitute for the force and
beauty of its process. - He was concerned with point of view which is at
the center of his aesthetic of the novel. He just
used this method to emphasize the inner awareness
and inward movements of his characters in face of
outside occurrences rather than merely
delineating their environment in any detail. He
was probably the first of the modern
psychological analysts in the novel and
anticipated in his works the modern
stream-of-consciousness technique.
21Appreciation of his The Jolly Corner
22Outline
- Plot summary
- Main Characters Analysis
- Themes
- Style
- Symbol and Images
- Critical Overview
- How Alice is characterized by the narrator
- Alice is considered an enigmatic figure in the
story
23Plot summary
- Spencer Brydon returns to New York City after
more than thirty years abroad. He has agreed to
tear down his old family house to build a more
lucrative apartment building. Before the wreckers
move in, he starts to prowl the house at night.
Brydon has begun to realize that he might have
been an astute businessman if he hadn't turned
his back on moneymaking for a more leisurely
life. He discusses this possibility with Alice
Staverton, his woman friend who has always lived
in New York.
24Plot summary
- Meanwhile Brydon begins to believe that his alter
egothe ghost of the man he might have beenis
haunting the "jolly corner," his nickname for the
old family house. After a harrowing night of
pursuit in the house, Brydon finally confronts
the ghost, who advances on him and overpowers him
with "a rage of personality before which his own
collapsed." Brydon eventually awakens with his
head pillowed on Alice Staverton's lap. It is
arguable to whether or not Spencer had actually
"passed out" or whether he had died and has
awoken in an afterlife. She had come to the house
because she sensed he was in danger. She tells
him that she pities the ghost of his alter ego,
who has suffered and lost two fingers from his
right hand. But she also embraces and accepts
Brydon as he is.
25Main Characters
- Spencer Brydon
- A wealthy, cultured man, Spencer Brydon returns
to New York City after spending thirty-three
years living in Europe and pursuing an interest
in art. He is overwhelmed by the changes he finds
in the city. - Now fifty-six, Spencer revisits the house on the
jolly corner of Manhattan where he grew up. His
parents, sister, and two brothers have passed
away, leaving him the sole owner of his childhood
home and another property. - While Spencer oversees the renovation of one of
his properties, he discovers an affinity for
project management and negotiating a business
deal. Surprised by his natural business acumen,
he wonders what his life would have been if he
had stayed in New York. Soon is obsessed with
thoughts of what he has missed.
26- Alice Staverton
- Alice is a childhood acquaintance of
Spencers. She accompanies him on his business
trips and listens to him reflect on his past. She
seems to be the only person who enjoys listening
to his reminiscences. - A single, middle-aged woman, Alice seems
lonely and suggests that Spencer move back to New
York City for good. At the storys end, Alice
confirms that she is not only very fond of
Spencer but possibly in love with him.
27Themes
- Memory and Reminiscence
- Alienation and Loneliness
- Art and Money
- Gender Roles
- Transformation and Change
28 - Memory and Reminiscence
- Spencer Brydons return to New York, his
friendship with Alice Staverton, and his
attraction to the house of his youth illustrate
his overwhelming need to analyze his past. He
needs to reflect on past events in order to
understand who he is now. In particular, Spencer
needs to come to terms with what he could have
been had he remained in New York in that way he
can accept himself and move on with his life.
29- Alienation and Loneliness
- When Spencer left New York as a young man, he
was rejecting a life in business and embracing a
career in art. Upon his return, he discovers the
full implications of his decision. He has he lost
his family also, New York City has irrevocably
changed to the point where he hardly recognizes
it. In some ways, Spencers experience is
universal in an attempt to recapture the past,
he discovers that the world he remembers does not
exist anymore. As a result, he feels alienated,
cut off from his past and his own identity.
30- Art and Money
- Spencer rejects a career in business and
escapes by pursuing a career in art in Europe.
Yet while Spencer vilifies the American scene as
materialistic and obsessed with money, he
continues to live off the profits of that world.
The rents from his properties make it possible
for him to travel without financial restriction
and to live abroad without having to work. The
story implies that the pursuit of art is
inextricably linked with money to deny the
connection is hypocritical.
31- Gender RolesSpencers rejection of a business
career raises questions about what it means to be
a powerful man in the early twentieth century.
When he leaves New York City, he seems to have
left behind the opportunity to marry and have a
family as well as a thriving business career. By
linking Spencers rejection of business to his
absence of family, the story implies that
personal choices are related to public pressures.
In a sense, Spencers pursuit of art is a protest
against one-dimensional concepts of masculinity
concepts that relate economic power to ones
worth as a man. - Alice also raises questions about how women are
supposed to live their lives. While she stays in
Manhattan her entire life, she never marries. The
reader learns little about her life apart from
her relationship to Spencer. Is her final embrace
of Spencer a strong assertion of her will or a
late and failed capitulation to the stereotypic
womans role of passive and dutiful wife?
32- Transformation and Change
- The story hinges on Spencer confronting his
alter ego. The storys conclusion suggests
Spencer and Alice will end up together and that
Spencers wandering has ended. But what has
Spencer learned? It is an open question whether
Spencer has accepted his past and truly been
transformed.
33Style
- Point of View and Narration
- In The Jolly Corner, the narrator is nearly
omniscient, relating exactly what Spencer sees,
thinks, and feels. However, this perspective is a
limited one. For example, Alices opinions are
presented by Spencer all impressions of her
character as well as others are presented
through him. - At a few points in the story the narrator
addresses the reader directly, implying perhaps
collaboration between the reader and narrator.
34 answer to question 1 in the selected readings
- Another narrative technique utilized by James is
the slightly different narrative tone used for
the different sections of the story. In the
second section, Spencer wanders the house alone
and the narrative voice nearly becomes his point
of view. In the first and third sections, the
narrator is more objective in explaining not only
Spencers impressions but other characters
actions and opinions. The second section
chronicles Spencers attempt to track down his
alter ego and is characterized by dense narrative
description
35Symbol and Images
- Spencers childhood house is the most fully
developed image in the story. - As a symbol of his past While walking in the
rooms of the house Spencer recalls the time when
the building was his home. - As a symbol of his economic circumstances his
choice to protect the building as a sacred space
is enabled by his wealth, partially generated
from the rents he collects on the other property.
Spencers personal quest to revisit the past is
connected to the business operations he has
attempted to avoid.
36- In Henry James other writings, he utilizes
architectural metaphors including the house,
and the window metaphorically, symbolizing
the structure that organizes and communicates
meaning in fiction. In the preface to his novel
The Portrait of a Lady (1881), James describes
the ideal house of fiction as having millions
of windows, each representing distinct
perspectives on the world.
37Critical Overview (how to understand Spencers
alter ego)
- The Jolly Corner has generated much critical
commentary. On one level, Spencer Brydons
experience is quite familiar and represents a
painful but inevitable aspect of the human
condition. Critics explore the implications of
his self-doubt and insecurity as well as the
meaning of the storys conclusion. Is the final
scene a moment of redemption for Spencer or, is
Spencer incapable of really coming to terms with
his past? - Some commentators view the story as
autobiographical. Like Spencer, James left the
United States (in 1875), lived in Europe for a
long period of time, and returned to find America
much changed. Spencers conflict between Europe
and America is subject of much of Jamess
fiction, literary criticism and diary entries.
Moreover, Alice Stavertons name echoes Jamess
beloved younger sister.
38- Spencers alter ego represents a personal and
philosophical crisis that Jamess father often
spoke about the vastation. Henry James, Sr.
was influenced by the moral philosopher Emmanuel
Swedenborg, whose ideas explored the unmanageable
energies of nature and the extremes of human
consciousness. The vastation was a visitation
by ones evil self that forced one to confront
their most sensitive weakness.
39- One well-established view is that by facing the
black stranger, Spencer confronts Henry Jamess
alter ego. Leon Edel, Jamess most meticulous and
authoritative biographer, considered Spencers
conflict emblematic of whether James regarded the
United States or England as the source of his
fiction. Brook charged James with turning his
back on the United States in an ineffective
attempt to associate with the more highly
esteemed, genteel class literary tradition of
England.
40- Keenly aware of his alter egos presence, he
holds to the conviction to show himself, in a
word, that he wasnt afraid. While walking down
the stairs he imagines himself a physical image,
an image almost worthy of an age of greater
romance.
41- Spencer masters a threatening adversary. His
alter ego is a personification of this violent
opposition some erect confronting presence,
something planted in the middle of the place and
facing him through the dusk. Spencer yearns to
win, to turn the table on the apparition,
proving again that he is not scared by scaring
someone else.
42- In the end, the plots thickening depends on
questioning the way Spencer has lived his life.
As Spencer stands at the window, he realizes the
full force of his isolation. Instead of seeing a
vulgar world against which he can elevate
himself, he sees a void. The void lacks any
sense of proportion or measure and reflects a
deeper crisis in Spencers perspective on the
world. His confusion at the window represents his
final inability to separate himself from the
world he had believed himself to have
transcended. -
43How Alice is characterized by the narrator
- The narrator characterizes Alice as listening
to everything and as a woman who answered
intimately but who utterly didnt chatter. In
these terms, Alice seems to be a mere complement
to Spencers heroic musings. - The narrator characterizes her in a static,
one-dimensional fashion as you were born to be
what you are, youre a person whom nothing can
have altered. Such terms erase Alices entire
life experience and feeling through a gross
generalization in contrast to which Spencer fills
his own crisis with dramatic depth.
44 Alice is considered an enigmatic figure in the
story
- A few critics have examined the character of
Alice with interesting results. InDoing Good by
Stealth Alice Staverton and Womens Politics
inThe Jolly Corner (1992), Russell Reising
views Alice as a major character. Within the
context of her time, Alice seems to be an anomaly
or outcast unmarried, no children and
self-supporting.
45- However, instead of symbolizing failed
femininity, Alice is viewed by some critics as
manipulative and deceptive. Some have even
characterized her as an artful liar. It is a bit
disconcerting, however, that despite Alices
apparent strength and independence she is so set
on marriage to Spencer. Has she spent
thirty-three years merely waiting for her man to
come home?
46- Recent criticism has both emphasized Spencers
egotism and attempted to uncover the full role of
Alice in Spencers resurrection. In A New
Reading of Henry Jamess The Jolly Corner
(1987), Daniel Mark Fogel contends that as the
story ends Spencer realizes that the monstrous
stranger is his alter ego. Only Alices love will
save him. In Alices embrace and Spencers
return, Spencer saves himself from tragic fate.
At the storys end, Spencer is loving and
beloved, enjoying at last a blessed state the
beauty of which the black stranger had never
tasted or could never taste.