The Rise of English Essay
The Rise of English Essay
The Rise of English Essay
Romanticism is Modern
• Searching for ‘felt experience, personal response or imaginative uniqueness’ in
literature is a modern preoccupation, inherited from the Romantics and the 19th century.
• Around the turn of the 18th century, literature becomes limited to creative, imaginative
works, and poetry represents human creativity, at odds with capitalist, industrial
utilitarianism. (N.B., a distinction between fictional and factual writing was long
established, and ‘poetry’ traditionally associated with the former; but seeing
‘imaginative’ as a positive attribution – think of words like ‘visionary’ or ‘inventive’ –
that was something new to this time.)
• Similarly, ‘prosaic’ acquires negative connotations during the Romantic period.
Why did the Romantics privilege imagination over fact? What does it
say about their age (or relationship thereto)?
• It is the period of French and American revolution; it is also an economic boom period
for England. So, great change is in the air. Romantic writing was full of enthusiasm for
such energetic convulsions. But they would grow frustrated. England’s industrial
middle class was ideologically conquered by ‘a crassly philistine Utilitarianism,’ which
‘fetish[ized] fact, reduc[ed] human relations to market exchanges and dismiss[ed] art as
unprofitable ornamentation.’ This is a time of wage-enslavement, labour-alienation,
absolute commodification. The working class resists; the upper class has fresh
memories of revolution; and the conditions of a police state are enacted.
• So, ‘creative imagination’ wasn’t simply for ‘idle escapism,’ but, in an industrialized
society indifferent/hostile to such things, rather was one of the few/only opportunities to
celebrate and affirm creativity.
• Moreover, ‘imaginative creation’ can be seen as opposed to industrialism: the literary
work is unified, in contrast to the ‘fragmented individualism the capitalist marketplace’;
it is spontaneous and autotelic, not calculated, creative, not calculated. It is a vehicle to
criticize rationalism and empiricism. Most major Romantics were activists.
The Symbol
• Symbolism is central to romanticism. It allows the resolution of insoluble societal
conflicts (‘material and spiritual, order and spontaneity’, e.g.). Where objects produced
by human labour are seen as commodities, they are divorced from the human subjects
who produced or used them. Rationalists can’t appreciate sensuousness; empiricists
can’t glimpse the global, the cosmic, the universal.
• Progress was encouraged, but orderly progress. Symbols could express such tensions.
*The symbol gave a material body to a-critical, intuitive, spiritual truth. It
was irrational; you get it or you don’t; it’s not for explaining. Analysis, dissection –
these were unwelcome practices.
• The symbol is unitary. Its parts are necessary for its whole; there is a common good.
Which is why the symbol is so regularly offered as a model for an industrialized
society.
Literature and Ideology; Literature
as New Religion
• Literature IS ideology; it’s intimately related to social power. It could be argued that it
seized the territory forfeited by religion.
• By mid-Victorian period, religion’s dominance was waning. Scientific discovery and
social change were undermining it.
*The diminution of religious ideological control troubled the élite, since
religion is effective for control. Effective why? Effective because it’s not explicitly
doctrinal (or, anyway, doesn’t depend on such) – no, it leverages ‘image, symbol,
habit,ritual and mythology. It is affective and experiential, entwining itself with the
deepest unconscious roots of the human subject’. It also is flexible enough to mean
different things to different classes. It resists rationalism and is unfalsifiable like the
symbol. And it pacifies, is a cult of meekness and self-sacrifice.
• There were some advocating for the study of English as a replacement for religion and
a panacea against national sickness (whatever that is). Prof. G. Gordon of Oxford ID’ed
English’s now three functions: to delight and instruct, but also ‘to save our souls and
heal the State.’ Religion is increasingly unable to provide cohesion and identity to this
class-society; English is supplied as an alternative.
• Matthew Arnold is a major figure for the movement/moment. He wished to
‘Hellenize’ the middle class, who lacked a rich ideology to match their influence. He
intended to share aristocratic ideology, even as the aristocracy was dominant power to
the middle class. State-established schools were one vehicle for this spiritual
transference.
• Per Arnold, this effort will also advantageously incorporate and control the working
class: It’s a calamity when a nation’s spirit and feeling are impoverished; so much the
more that the middle classes – unintelligent, without spirit and culture – cannot
educated the lower classes (who are, in fact more sympathetic and liberal (for some
reason…)). The lower classes crave improvement, but the middle classes cannot provide
it.
• Arnold is honest with himself: uncivilized masses can become riotous masses.
• Literature qua humanizing tool made sense: it deals, ultimately, in universalities and
values – nothing ephemeral, no wars, no acts of oppression or dispossession; it places
‘the petty demands of working people’ in perspective; it might even make them
oblivious to such concerns. It promotes sympathy between the classes, is a vista onto a
shared truth – it exists above the daily smoke and in. Literature trains the masses in
pluralism and empathy – the empathy for their ‘masters.’
• Literature advertises the ‘moral riches’ of the bourgeoisie, and the achievements of the
middle class (whatever those may be). It also – being a mostly solitary activity –
perforce discourages congregation and collectivism.
• Literature fosters pride in language and nation too; the lower classes can share in the
tradition – even if they aren’t likely to have the time or ability to produce masterpieces
themselves. Literature trains the masses in patriotism.
• Like religion, literature works through ’emotion and experience’; it opposes the
analytical thought of, say, science; no, it traffics in feeling and experience. However(!),
it is worth asking, ‘whose experience, and what kinds of feeling’.
• Post-Arnold, literature is opposed to ‘ideological dogma’. It is not concerned with
beliefs so much as feelings (including the felt responses to beliefs, I suppose). It deals
in timelessness. And it, therefore, preserves the status quo by distracting from
interrogating it.
• Literature also treats the symptom of poverty by providing vicarious experiences: you
can read about great travels and adventures, etc., that you couldn’t have a hope to
actually live out.
• English was first taught in workers’ colleges and ‘extension lecturing circuits.’ And
the emphasis was on solidarity, morality, and national pride. Morality shifts from a code
of ethics to a patterns of living; it becomes dramatized/ritualized, not codified. (Which
means, I suppose, that it loses the ability to be understood, analyzed, criticized; novels
train you how to act, without explaining why to act thus.)
William Empson
• Empson was also a very attentive critic, but less doctrinaire; he sees poetry as a type of
‘ordinary’ language – it can surely be paraphrased; its authors’ (likely) intentions can be
considered; social contexts give the words true meaning. New Critics’ ‘paradoxical’
poems are resolvable and unified; Empson’s ‘ambiguous’ poems are endlessly open to
interpretation and can never be solved to perfection. The New Critics and Richards
search the text for meaning; Empson understands that the reader will impose his or her
specific catalogue of meanings.
• To his credit, Empson questions how universal his theories are, i.e. the degree to
which useful readings are possible by all. He posits ‘pastoral’ as the genre where
analytical rigour and basic, common humanity can best intersect. But even weighing
how to resolve this dilemma essentially proves that the dilemma exists to be resolved –
there is a gulf between the highly specialized literacy practiced by critics and the
‘universal’ preoccupations held by the masses. If you are to believe that the literary
critic and the commoner hard done by the Depression can find common ground, you
must do so by believing in ‘common reason.’ But pastoral doesn’t unite the lords and
peasants it depicts; it juxtaposes them. But at least it addresses the relationship…
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ἐπιγραφή
I don't believe in Huntington's Clash of Civilizations - East and West; Islam and
Christianity. No. I think the battle of the 21st century is between the fanatics, of all
colours and all faiths, and the rest of us. There is difference in scope, but not in
essence, between Bin Laden and people who blow up abortion clinics in America or
burn down synagogues and mosques in Europe. They are fanatics. Big or small, but
they are fanatics.
-Amos Oz