To Kill A Mockingbird Essay On The Topic The Quietest People Are Often The Most Powerful
Sunday, June 28, 2020
Wyndham Lewiss Tarr An Exploration of Humour - Literature Essay Samples
Tarr is a novel that describes reality as deplete of an inherent moral code, and Lewis articulates the world as hostile, set in direct opposition to the romantic, Rousseauvian vision of ââ¬Å"wild nature and unspoilt manâ⬠. Within this world Lewis questions whether ââ¬Ëthe selfââ¬â¢ is intrinsic or is built up of the external self we express to others; paradoxically he endorses and criticises the superficiality of the way we present ourselves to others. This questioning of identity is reflected within the genre of the novel itself, which vacillates between comedy and tragedy. Tarr has been described by T.S. Eliot as ââ¬Å"terrifyingâ⬠in its scrutiny of ââ¬Å"modern civilisationâ⬠, and upon the surface the frequently violent developments in plot ranging from rape to suicide ââ¬â are more appropriate to a tragedy. And yet the majority of the novel is written in a darkly comic, sardonic tone that would seem to undermine the seriousness of the events describ ed. Contrary to this apparent tone, Lewisââ¬â¢s own views on humour are conflicted, frequently he claims its effect to be that of a drug an opiate to null our grip on reality. The treatment of comedy as problematic, or even dangerous is nothing new ââ¬â Plato argued that taking pleasure in comedy was abhorrent, claiming that ââ¬Å"taken generally, the ridiculous is a certain kind of evil, specifically a viceâ⬠1. However, if we are to accept a world absent of morality, comedy takes a different form ââ¬â by provoking the reader to laugh at subjects typically seen as immoral (rape, murder and suicide) crucially I will argue Lewis makes the reader complicit in, or rather submit to, this violent world. Within Tarr nature is presented as both hostile and valueless, nonetheless Lewis manages to maintain a comedic tone. This ruthless presentation of the natural world is evident both in outcomes of the plot (Berthaââ¬â¢s romanticizing causes a mental breakdown; Krieslerââ¬â¢s national pride results in manslaughter and suicide) but also in Tarrââ¬â¢s philosophizing and analysis of events in the beginning and latter stages of the novel. For example, in reaction to Anastaysia likening his world-view to that of Rousseauââ¬â¢s, he remarks ââ¬Å"there is no more value in stupidity and formlessness than there is in dung, but they are necessary. The conditions of creation and of life disgust me. This disgust, but acknowledgement of the necessity of, the primal state of man ââ¬â expressed through scatological vocabulary is reflected in Lewisââ¬â¢s involvement with Vorticism. In the avant-garde magazine Blast he proclaims ââ¬Å"we want to leave Nature and Men aloneâ⬠w ith the manifesto acting as ââ¬Å"an avenue for all those vivid and violent ideas that could reach the Public in no other wayâ⬠2. Within this world, in the words of critic Michael North ââ¬Å"human beings actually are mechanical objectsâ⬠3, indeed the language of man-made machinery pervades the text and is consistently blurred with the natural world: ââ¬Å"Nature was not friendly to him; its metallic tints jarredâ⬠. Laughter and humour do not escape this automation, as North continues ââ¬Å"it is the function of laughter, to expose their [human] pretentions to be otherwise [to be anything other than a ââ¬Å"mechanical objectâ⬠]â⬠; to Lewis laughter and tragedy are intertwined, as in our laughter we delude ourselves into believing we are not machines, but simultaneously in the act of laughing we betray our own machinations. In regard to the relationship between this world to the artist, sex is highlighted as being in direct opposition to Art, with sensua lity possessing corrosive effects, as Tarr exclaims to Anastaysia ââ¬Å"naked men and women are the worst art of all, because there are fewer semi-dead things about themâ⬠. This hostility towards sex, in reaction to the hostility of Nature itself, is prevalent in much of Lewisââ¬â¢s writing, including short story Cantlemanââ¬â¢s Spring-mate. Here he describes the rape of country girl Stella by newly enlisted First World War serviceman Cantleman, and towards the end of the story, the female body becomes synonymous with the natural world: ââ¬Å"nature tempted him towards herâ⬠4. As critic Alex Houen argues ââ¬Å"Nature itself provokes the rapeâ⬠¦ Cantlemanââ¬â¢s actions show that he is incapable of forming any proper ethical understandingâ⬠5. This argument can be extended to Krieslerââ¬â¢s rape of Bertha in Tarr, and its deconstruction by the eponymous protagonist: ââ¬Å"The nearest the general run get to art is Action: sex is there form of art: the battle for existence is their picture.â⬠Kriesler, in part due to the displacement of his ââ¬Å"art-instinctâ⬠with sex, attempts to fight against nature ââ¬â or his ââ¬Å"Destinyâ⬠(ââ¬Å"Doomed, Evidentlyâ⬠, the chapter 2 title describes this destiny, and was originally intended to be the name of the novel 6) ââ¬â with an act of sexual assault. Yet the rape itself is proceeded by the ridiculous: ââ¬Å"your arms are like bananasâ⬠, and like Cantleman his attempts to emerge victorious with, or assign purpose to, nature crucially proves to be futile, resulting in his suicide. In the preface to the earlier 1918 American edition of Tarr, Lewis makes the claim that the title character ââ¬Å"exalts Life into a Comedy, when otherwise it is, to his mind, a tawdry zone of half art, or a silly tragedyâ⬠. The authors idiosyncratic playfulness with capitalization ââ¬â with the capitals of nationalities often dropped such as in ââ¬Å"But he was mo re german than the Germans (p190) to mock the arbitrariness of national conventions ââ¬â visually expresses concepts he regards as important. And in the case of the preface, these concepts are critical to the overall genre of the novel itself. While Lewis chooses to capitalize ââ¬Å"Lifeâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Comedyâ⬠he refuses to do the same for the genre of tragedy, confining it to the reductive adjective ââ¬Å"sillyâ⬠. At its heart, the world ââ¬â filtered and assessed by Tarr is the makings of a tragedy that has been transfused by its protagonist and author into a satire. Fluctuations in genre are experienced most dramatically in the description of rape which quickly veers from the brutal depiction of Bertha (arguably the most sympathetic character in the novel) ââ¬Å"convulsed upon her back, her mouth smeared with bloodâ⬠to the comparison of her arms to bananas. The rape itself is obscured as ââ¬Å"an iron curtain rushed down upon that tragedyâ⬠ââ¬â the tone and narrative become fragmented, and through use of a theatrical metaphor Lewis consciously prevents the novel from becoming a ââ¬Å"tragedyâ⬠ââ¬â the machine-aged curtain closes the set-piece, subverting traditional storytelling. Tragedy and comedy have always been closely intertwined ââ¬â both are ââ¬Å"based on the violation of mental patterns and expectations, and in both the world is a tangle of conflicting systems where human live in the shadow of failure, folly and deadâ⬠7. And yet what distinguishes tragedy from comedy is that while the former asks i ts audience to hold an ââ¬Å"emotional engagement with lifeââ¬â¢s problemsâ⬠, the latter ââ¬Å"embodies an anti-heroic, pragmatic attitude toward lifeââ¬â¢s incongruitiesâ⬠8. Yet the description of rape and Berthaââ¬â¢s own perspective, adopts elements from both camps in rapid succession, and Berthaââ¬â¢s subsequent perception of Kreisler aligns him with this fragmentation: ââ¬Å"She saw side by side and unconnected, the silent figure engaged in drawing her bust and the other one full of violence â⬠¦ four in all, that she could not for some reason bring together, each in a complete compartment of time of its own.â⬠(167) Kreislerââ¬â¢s external self, split into four, acts as one of the most surreal images in the novel. While it can be interpreted psychologically, perhaps it can also be explained in terms of genre; just as Kreisler splits into multiple selves, the novel is split between its depiction of violence and its relation to tragedy and com edy. This tonal warfare is resumed in Berthaââ¬â¢s opening of the door to reveal Kriesler, which is compared to ââ¬Å"the tearing of a characterless mask off a hideous and startling faceâ⬠leaving Bertha in a motionless, ââ¬Å"paralysed gestureâ⬠in between the emotional extremes of laughter and tears; externalizations of the comic and tragic elements of the novel. Ironically, in their static pose both characters ââ¬â to an extent embody Tarrââ¬â¢s artistic ideals of which ââ¬Å"deadness is the first condition for artâ⬠and ââ¬Å"anything living, quick and changing is bad artâ⬠. While Bertha and Kriesler are alive, their rigidness and lack of movement alongside the description of Kriesler as ghostly or ââ¬Å"an apparition from the remote Past, but from a Past almost a Present, a half-hour old, far more startling: the too raw and too new colours of an image hardly digestedâ⬠blurs this supposedly rigid distinction between ââ¬Å"Lifeâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Artâ⬠. Both characters are caught in a vortex (ââ¬Å"the chilly return of a circling stormâ⬠) ââ¬â blurring the continuum between space and time, alongside the blurring of the tragic and comic. However, making light of a subject as morally abhorrent as rape to some critics is further evidence of Lewisââ¬â¢ explicit misogyny, a quality of his writing which Frederick James argues ââ¬Å"no longer exists at the level of mere personal opinion, as is the case, for example, with the various attitudes and ââ¬Å"ideasâ⬠of a Balzac or Faulknerâ⬠. Lewisââ¬â¢s depiction of women throughout Tarr is plagued with an apparent distain for them: ââ¬Å"A complex image developed in his mind as he stood with her. He was remembering Schopenhauer â⬠¦ A woman had at her centre a kernel, a sort of very substantial astral baby: this brat was apt to swellâ⬠(46). The infantilization of women as ââ¬Å"astral babyâ⬠, alongside the appeal to Schopenhauer who in his essay On Women writes ââ¬Å"women are qualified to be the nurses and governesses of our earliest childhood by the very fact they are themselves childishâ⬠9, is surely proof of Lewisââ¬â¢s rampant mi sogyny filtered into his fiction. Perhaps in conflict with this view ââ¬â specifically in regard to Berthaââ¬â¢s rape critic Ann Ardis takes the position that the scene, due to its nontraditional presentation, forces the reader to leave behind their moral judgement. ââ¬Å"Lewis also refrains from encouraging the reader to judge Kreislerââ¬â¢s actions on moral or ethical groundsâ⬠, she writes ââ¬Å"to read this scene as a representation of violence against a woman is as ââ¬Å"inaneâ⬠10 as Berthaââ¬â¢s tears, because the morally centered, sequence-oriented reading strategies that work for classic realism (and that would fuel Berthaââ¬â¢s interpretation of Kreislerââ¬â¢s action as a violation of her personhood) simply do not obtain here.â⬠Ardis provides a compelling, arguably controversial, case for her claim that Lewis encourages the reader to put aside their moral code. By avoiding ââ¬Å"classic realismâ⬠in the sequence the reader cannot interpret the sequence in the same way that they would a classic realist text. This position can be extended to the discussion of humor; through use of comedy throughout the novel Lewis not only makes us morally impartial to the violence, but he also invites us to laugh at the nature of natureââ¬â¢s absurdity. Despite the fact Lewis may attempt to illicit this response upon the reader, his own views on comedy were riddled with ambivalence. In the first addition of Blast, humor is one of his targets for the firing squad: ââ¬Å"BLAST HUMOUR Quack ENGLISH drug for stupidity and sleepiness. Arch enemy of REAL, conventionalizing like gunshot, freezing supple REAL in ferocious chemistry of laughter.â⬠11 However, in the same edition Lewis suggests humor is acceptable as long as it is structured in the same way as tragedy and vice versa: ââ¬Å"We only want Humour if it has fought like Tragedy. We only want to surface a laugh like a bomb.â⬠12 This militaristic language, reminiscent of futurism (ââ¬Å"We will glorify warââ¬âthe worldââ¬â¢s only hygieneââ¬âmilitarism, patriotism, the destructive gesture of freedom-bringers, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and scorn for woman.â⬠13) likens the act of laughing to the explosion of a bomb. As critic Michael North points out B last itself was meant to be ââ¬Å"a gust of satiric humor, aimed like a bomb at the heart of English complacency (â⬠¦) But Blast also blast humour, and though it is possible to distinguish the kind of humour found among the targets of the manifesto from that used by the manifesto itself, these is still a residual sense of difficulty and contradictionâ⬠14. This sense of contradiction described by North pervades Tarr, as the titular character proclaims that humor ââ¬Å"does paralyse the sense for Reality, people are rapt by their sense of humour in a phlegmatic and hysteric dream worldâ⬠. And yet as established in the very prologue (albeit for the 1918 edition), Lewis makes Tarrââ¬â¢s comedic inclinations, as a way of dealing with a reality disposed to tragedy, clear. The concept that humor results in a disconnect from reality and ultimately a ââ¬Å"dream worldâ⬠solipsism, is reflected in Lewisââ¬â¢s article ââ¬ËThe English Sense of Humourââ¬â¢. With in the piece, which again likens humor to a drug, he laments that ââ¬Å"accustomed as he is to deadening and drugging everything with his Sense of Humour (lest he should suffer pain or shock by the contact of too crude a reality) in the end the Englishman ceases to respond at all to novel aggressions, or the increasingly unpleasant circumstances in which, historically, he is now liable to find himselfâ⬠15. It could be argued that Lewis is guilty of committing upon the reader the act his very article describes. Indeed, by provoking us to accept and even laugh at the violent world of Tarr, we are forced ââ¬â to refer back to Ardis ââ¬â change our ââ¬Å"reading strategiesâ⬠16 and set aside our moral judgement. And yet by doing this we are forced to conform to Lewisââ¬â¢s worldview ââ¬â namely that of a violent world devoid of morals. The result of this is that his own brand of humor, rather than entirely subverting what North describes as the ââ¬Å"herdlike conformityâ⬠17 of contemporary comedy, has the effect of forcing the reader to submit to it.Ultimately, the paradoxical nature of Lewisââ¬â¢s opinions of comedy converge with the tenants of Vorticism, in that no single idea is given prominence, rather we are presented with a swirl of conflicting opinions reminiscent of his BLAST and BLESS dichotomy. Indeed, in the same edition of the magazine in which he blasts humor in general, he blesses ââ¬Å"English Humourâ⬠claiming it to be the ââ¬Å"great barbarous weaponâ⬠18. This is simultaneously in direct opposition to his later chastising of the subject in the Spectator article. The comedy of Tarr resembles this vortex, on the one hand the humor is subversive, reflecting Lewisââ¬â¢s view in Men Without Art of the purpose of satire to refer to ââ¬Å"an ââ¬Å"expressionistâ⬠universe, which is receding a little, a little drunken with an overdose of the ââ¬Ëridiculousââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ 19, and yet on the other h and through making us laugh at what should typically be tragic it forces us to conform to his hostile worldview. By the middle of the novel Lewis provokes us to laugh at Krieslerââ¬â¢s threats of suicide to his father (ââ¬Å"If.. no money is sent, it being impossible to live without money, I shall on the seventh of Julyâ⬠¦ shoot myself) and Berthaââ¬â¢s mental and physical dishevelment (ââ¬Å"She, too is german pastry, more homely than you though Homelyââ¬â¢s the wordâ⬠). Lewis also illustrates that recognizing the absurdity of the world in terms of a comedy offers little protection from said world. While Anastaysia and Tarr may hold a sense of self-superiority against Bertha, Kriesler and the ââ¬Å"bourgeious bohemians, they are also condemned to a vicious cycle of sexuality illustrated by the novels end: ââ¬Å"Tarr and Anastaysa did not marryâ⬠¦The cheerless and stodgy absurdity of Rose Fawcett required as compensation the painted, fine and enquiring fac e of Prism Dirkes.â⬠The recognition of the absurdity of the machine-like nature of humanity does little to help one escape from being a machine themselves. And in finding this hostile natural funny the reader must accept that Lewis proves his own point, namely that our laughter forces us to withdraw our moral code resembling the world of Tarr itself. And crucially, this humour acts as an act of self-delusion, a tragic, mechanical trick in an attempt to convince ourselves we are not mechanical.Endnotes and Bibliography:1 Bury, Robert Gregg, ed. The Philebus of Plato. University Press, 1897. 2 Lewis, Wyndham. Blast. Vol. 1. Kraus Reprint Corp., 1914. 3 North, Michael. Machine-age comedy. Vol. 2. Oxford University Press, 2009. P1144 Lewis, Wyndham. Cantlemans Spring-mate. Little review, 1917. 5 Houen, Alex. Terrorism and modern literature: from Joseph Conrad to Ciaran Carson. OUP Oxford, 2002. P139 6 Lewis, Wyndham, and William K. Rose. The Letters of Wyndham Lewis. New Direction s Publishing Corporation, 1963 p223 7 Morreall, J. (2012). ââ¬Å"Philosophy of Humorâ⬠The Standford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. URL: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/humor/ [Accessed 10 Jan. 2018].8 ibid9 Schopenhauer, Arthur. Essays of Schopenhauer. The Floating Press, 2010. P122 10 Ardis, Ann L. Modernism and Cultural Conflict, 1880ââ¬â1922. Cambridge University Press, 2002. P10411 Lewis, Wyndham. Blast. Vol. 1. Kraus Reprint Corp., 1914. 12 Ibid 13 Marinetti, Filippo Tommaso. The founding and manifesto of futurism. Le figaro 51, no. 1 (1909). 14 North, Michael. Machine-age comedy. Vol. 2. Oxford University Press, 2009. P11615 Lewis, Wyndham ââ¬Å"The English Sense of Humour, The Spectator, 15 June 1934 16 Ardis, Ann L. Modernism and Cultural Conflict, 1880ââ¬â1922. Cambridge University Press, 2002. P10417 North, Michael. Machine-age comedy. Vol. 2. Oxford University Press, 2009. pp117-11818 Lewis, Wyndham. Blast. Vol. 1. Kraus Reprint Corp., 1914. 19 Lewis, Wynd ham. Men Without Art. Russell Russell, 1934.
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