john fowles (1926-2005). 2, september 16 ted hughes 3, september 23 tony harrison 4, september...

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John Fowles (1926-2005)

2, September 16 Ted Hughes3, September 23 Tony Harrison4, September 30 Seamus Heaney5, October 7 Anthony Burgess (lecturer: Ákos Farkas)6, October 14 Carol Ann Duffy 7, October 21 John Fowles

(October 23-30 autumn break – no lectures)8, November 4 Tom Stoppard9, November 11 Caryl Churchill & in-yer-face theatre 10, November 18 Salman Rushdie11, November 25 Julian Barnes12, December 2 Angela Carter and Amy Sackville 13, December 9 Tibor Fischer COMPULSORY READINGS AT SEAS3.ELTE.HU

EXAMS: 5 and 18 JAN

(1963) The Collector(1964) The Aristos (1965) The Magus (revised 1977)(1969) The French Lieutenant's Woman(1973) Poems by John Fowles(1974) The Ebony Tower(1974) Shipwreck(1977) Daniel Martin(1978) Islands(1979) The Tree(1980) The Enigma of Stonehenge(1982) A short history of Lyme Regis(1982) Mantissa (1985) A Maggot(1985) Land (with Fay Godwin)(1990) Lyme Regis Camera(1998) Wormholes - Essays and Occasional Writings(2003) The Journals - Volume 1 (2006) The Journals - Volume 2

John Fowles (1926-2005)

• born in 1926 in Leighton-on-Sea, Essex ”oppressively conformist family life”

• short military service (marine training finished on 8th May, 1945)

• educated at Oxford: French existentialism (Camus, Sartre)conformity and the will of the individual

• 1950-63: teaching in France, Greece (Spetsai) and in London• 1963: The Collector (success, earlier unfinished novels)• publishes fiction, poetry and essays regularly until 1990• 1968: moves to Lyme Regis

• http://www.fowlesbooks.com

The Collector (1963)• lonely lower-class Ferdinand Clegg

(butterfly collector) falls in lovewith higher middle-class arts student Miranda Grey, but unable to approach her

• after winning a large sum, kidnapsher

• love as total possession• first part: story in Clegg’s p. o. v.

cold, emotionless languageClegg incapable of intimacy and normal human relationships

• second part: Miranda’s diary• third part narrated by Clegg again

The Collector (1963)

• second part: Miranda’s diaryat first scared and afraid of Clegg’s alleged sexual motives

• later learns Clegg better and starts to pity himCaliban / Miranda situation (The Tempest):hopeless obsession (Ferdinand!)

• tries to escape and also to seduce Clegg, but it only leads to confusion. Miranda becomes desperate, grows ill and dies.

The Collector (1963)

• third part narrated by Clegg again• He first considers committing suicide, but after

discovering Miranda’s diary and the fact that she never loved him, he decides he is not responsible.Considers kidnapping another girl.

• social and intellectual division:power in the hand of those who are intellectually

unsuited to control it

In The Aristos (1964): moral and intellectual elite (Heraclitus)

The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1969)

Characters: Charles Smithson (aristocrat)Tina (Ernestina) nouveau richeSarah Woodruff Sam FarrowMary

Charles enjoys the company of his fiancée Ernestina in rural Lyme Regis, when he meets the outcast Sarah and finally falls in love with her.In the first version he returns to Ernestina. [First ending]

• He breaks up the engagement with Ernestina and returns to Sarah

• A long search follows; Sarah finally found in the company of artists in London, with a daughter

• Two alternative versions for and ending are offered:– Charles recognizes that Lalage is his

own child, and a family reunion is implied[Second ending]

– A bitter reunion: they meet and part again unhappily [Third ending]

Reader to choose the appropriate ending (?)

The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1969)

• re/deconstruction of the Victorian novel (and society)narration: chronologicalvery detailed descriptions (dignified journalism?)

• Victorian topics:– society (wide, many layers)– historical progress and evolution (cf. Sam)

[Dickens’s Sam Weller]

– victorian dilemma: rank marrying money– male hero facing decision: fair vs. dark lady

[femme fatale]

– victorian omniscience

(beginning: place, time, weather)

• victorian novel with a modern consciousnesspraise and criticism of victorian novelcriticism of postmodernism (shallow, depthless)

• Do we know victorians better?details vs. perspective / overall view (today?)

• 1960’s: freedom decade, sexual revolutionIsn’t freedom an illusion?Are we as free as we think? Aren’t we calculable?

Attitude to history

creative anachronism

looking for our problems in the historical context

projection of a 1960s mentality into the 1860s allusion to 20th century referents in 19th c. context

mostly remains at the level of the narrator’s discourse

foregrounding the temporal distance between the act of narration and the objects narrated

but also penetrates the fictional world

Hayden White: history is a narrative historians create / reveal the connections among events

common features of history and fiction

Victorian novel: dignified journalism

Mimetic aspect

everything about how people lived – except a man and a woman in the sexual act (Fielding, Defoe: earlier)

But exposing the gap between the date of the story and the date of its composition inevitably reveals not just the artificiality of historical fiction, but the artificiality of all fiction…. The French Lieutenant’s Woman is a novel as much about novel writing as about the past. There is a word for this kind of fiction, “Metafiction”…

David Lodge, “A Sense of the Past”

In: David Lodge, The Art of Fiction (1992)

Chapter 13 – Metafiction

”Who is Sarah?Out of what shadow does she come?”

”I do not know. This story I am telling is all imagination. These characters I create never existed outside my own mind. If I have pretended until now to know my characters’s minds and innermost thoughts, it is because I am writing in […] a convention universally accepted at the time of my story: that the novelist stands next to God.”

authorial intrusion (also in Chapter 55): carefully created illusion broken

author or narrator (or character)?

essay or novel? (cf. Huxley)

”We know a world is an organism, not a machine. […] a planned world (a world that fully reveals its planning) is a dead world. It is only when our characters and events begin to disobey us that they begin to live. […]

In other words, to be free myself, I must give him [Charles], and Tina, and Sarah, even the abominable Mrs. Poulteney, their freedoms as well. There is only one good definition of God: the freedom that allows other freedoms to exist.”

• autonomy / existential independence of the characters?basic features of the novel (character, author, ending) problematized

• author as a modern (romantic) myth:

the work of art stems in the author

This myth questioned byRoland Barthes: ‘The Death of the Author’ (1968)Wimsatt and Beardsley: ‘The Intentional Fallacy’

(1946)

Fowles: the unfreedom of the tyrantself-conscious author

The freedom of the characters

• The freedom of Sarah:you cannot know her, you cannot calculate her moves

• explanations:quasi-religious: Mrs Poulteney (lapsed woman, fails second chance)

scientific: Dr Grogan (Darwinist, agnostic) hysteria

social: trying to rise at a high rank / fallen woman excludes herself from society

Charles: no explanation: freedom (explain = control)

I know a person = I can calculate his/her actions = predictability (power)

threat of uncertainty: threat of freedom (cf. 1984)

• ”Fiction usually pretends to conform to the reality: the writer puts the conflicting wants in the ring and describes the fight – but in fact fixes the fight, letting that want he himself favours win. And we judge writers of fiction both by the skill they show in fixing the fights (in other words, in persuading us that they were not fixed) and by the kind of fighter they fix in favour of…” (Chapter 55)

Endings: aleatoric principle

John Cage: 4’33’’ (1952) also 0’0’’ (1962)also: chance procedures in other works

B. S Johnson: The Unfortunates (1969)book in a box

the tyranny of the last chapter

” I take my purse from my pocket […], I extract a florin, I rest it on my right thumbnail, I flick it, spinning, two feet into the air and catch it in my left hand.

So be it.” (Chapter 55)

The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981)Director: Karel Reisz

Screenplay: Harold Pinter

Starring Meryl Streep, Jeremy Irons

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