Monday, January 28, 2019
Modernism: A Critical Analysis
T. S. Eliot did non invent moderneism in literature, entirely his poem The Waste wreak (1922) expresses more distinctly than anyone else what the modernist lay offeavor really was. More than a poem, it was an occasion, a cry that defined a moment in time, and which it is non achiev fitted to repeat. Eliot himself decl ared that he had moved on from the flare of The Waste sphere promptly after. Shortly after its publication he expressed in a private correspondence, As for The Waste priming, that is a thing of the past(a) so far as I am concerned and I am now feeling toward a new form and style (qtd. in Chinitz 69).The Hollow Men (1926) is nothing as fragmentary, chaotic and nihilistic as is the 1922 poem. In The Waste Land we seem he consider an unalloyed expression of despair the despair that purposeful graphics in no more realistic in the immense panorama of futility and tumult which is contemporary history (qtd. in Sigg 182). Yet the poem is not a complete negation of art. It manages a sort of coherence towards the bar, in which we may call for a nominateion that art may still be possible amidst desolate meaninglessness of the modern age.The First World War is the particular that finally shattered the cozy certainties of the Victorian age. At a more protean level, it annulled the optimism of the humanist endeavor which gave rise to the Renaissance, the Enlightenment and the scientific field view. It is meaningful that the major part of this endeavor was carried out in art and literature. In the aftermath to the Great War came disillusionment, because it was widely perceived that come along did not bring peace but war the most brute(a) and mindless sort. It was not just corpses and rubble that littered Europe, but the occidental psyche too was littered with rubble.The Waste Land is essentially a collection of fragments from the tradition of literature. The ultimate statement made by Eliot is that there is no more meaning in which th e artist can engender his tradition and further it. Yet he cannot abandon the past either, for his identity element is still contained within those fragments. These fragments I have shored against my ruins, says the Fisher King, who is not able to redeem the wasteland that stretches before him (Eliot 69). This expresses the core sentiment of the poem, which is in the end a mere collection of literary fragments. It is a demonstration of what the feed of the artist has become, for the message of Eliot is that the artist is indeed reduced to gathering dust from his cultural past.Eliots poem is not meant to be imitated. Its function is to fold the spirit of the age and give it voice. So successful was it in this latter(prenominal) role that many of its literary features began to be adopted, especially so in the novel form, towards the creation of the modernist novel. The most common feature of this fabrication is the impaired and alienated protagonist in an urban setting who stru ggles against encroaching meaninglessness. Of this fiction Federman says, The creatures of the new fiction will be as changeable, as illusory, as nameless, as unnamable, as fraudulent, as unpredictable as the discourse that makes them (12).To attempt such a narrative effective novelists were soon employing a thingmajig known as stream of consciousness. It sacrifices coherence for an effect which seems to suggest that we are privy to the unexpurgated thoughts and impressions of the protagonist. Ulysses by James Joyce is composed all told I this mode, and another novelist who use this method effectively is Virginia Woolf. Most much it is used for effect in novels which retain some meaningfulness, therefore are not entirely nihilistic. In such novels we identify the contining search for possibilities in art which Eliot had instigated.The novels of Franz Kafka use the accomplished narrative voice, yet depict a world that is fragmented and devoid of meaning. The protagonist in The Trial wakes up one morning to discover that he is under arrest, subject to trial, but free to move about in the meantime. There is no immediate explanation of his wrong-doing, and none is forthcoming as the trial grinds on. Not and self-preservation, the protagonist is also seeking for meaning. only when the only meaning that emerges is that the system of rules has decided that he is the accused, which has set into motion a work whose eventual and inevitable outcome is a brutal execution.Everybody seems to be disoriented before the system, both friend and foe. They cannot effect its course, and neither can they suck out meaning from it. The state embodies logic, of which Kafka says, Logic is doubtless unshakable, but it cannot withstand a man who wants to go on living (Kafka 263). Instead of war, Kafkas center is on the bureaucratization of the modern state, but evokes the same sense of despair and the impuissance of the individual before greater and inexplicable forces, the unmistakable stamp of modernism.The gaga Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway is also considered a modernist novel. though more famed for his hard-edged realism, in this last effort before his death Hemingway has created a powerful parable of futility. Santiago is a Cuban fisherman who has met awful luck, having not caught a fish for 84 solar days. On the 85th day he becomes reckless and ventures further into the sea than anyone else before. He hooks a marlin of such tremendous size that it hauls Santiago and his boat around sea for and entire day.The old fisherman is soon locked in an epic competitiveness of strength, guile and wits with the marlin, and expends every last bit of himself for over triplet days of struggle. Bloodied and drained, he has his catch in the end, which he begins to drag shoreward. But sharks then fall upon the marlin, and the old man cannot contend them off with his harpoon. Though futile, Hemingway suggests that the old mans struggle has transcendenta l value.He makes frequent comparisons betwixt the old man and Christ, and describes the old man in awe of the gentry of the marlin, even while locked in a life and death battle with it. He is described as musing, But it is good that we do not have to try to kill the sun or the moon or the stars. It is enough to live on the sea and kill our true brothers (Hemingway 75). In its tenor of unremitting futility the novel is modernist. The meaning discovered in the end is transcendental and religious, in which the spirit of the individual is pitched against his biological limitations (Walcutt 275). This is significant when we recall that Eliot too discovered religion later in life.In conclusion, in his poem The Waste Land Eliot expressed a feeling that conventional motivation of the artist was no longer relevant in the modern age, because the aspirations of the previous age, that which had motivated writers and artists in the Victorian era, had been rendered null and void. But at the sam e time it initiated a new quest in literature, which became a movement known as modernism, and especially employed by novelists. In their novels, which mostly emphasized the meaninglessness of modern existence, the modernist novelist nevertheless tends to dicover transcendental or religious meaning.Works CitedChinitz, David. T.S. Eliot and the Cultural Divide. Chicago University of Chicago Press, 2003.Eliot, Thomas Stearns. The Waste Land and Other Poems. New York Penguin Classics, 1998.Federman, Raymond. Surfiction Fiction Now and Tomorrow. Athens OH Swallow Press, 1975.Hemingway, Ernest. The centenarian Man and the Sea. New York Simon & Schuster, 1995.Kafka, Franz. The Trial. Trans. Willa Muir, Edwin Muir. New York Schocken Books, 1995.Sigg, Eric Whitman. The American T. S. Eliot A determine of the Early Writings. Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press, 1989.Walcutt, Charles Child. American Literary Naturalism, A Divided Stream. Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press, 19 74.
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