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Fictions of the Afterlife: Temporality and Belief in Late Modernism PDF

381 Pages·2009·29.05 MB·English
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Fictions of the Afterlife: Temporality and Belief in Late Modernism by Alexander Ruch Program in Literature Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Fredric Jameson, Co-Chair ___________________________ Michael Valdez Moses, Co-Chair ___________________________ Toril Moi ___________________________ Kenneth Surin Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Literature in the Graduate School of Duke University 2009 ABSTRACT Fictions of the Afterlife: Temporality and Belief in Late Modernism by Alexander Ruch Program in Literature Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Fredric Jameson, Co-Chair ___________________________ Michael Valdez Moses, Co-Chair ___________________________ Toril Moi ___________________________ Kenneth Surin An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Literature in the Graduate School of Duke University 2009 Copyright by Alexander Ruch 2009 Abstract This dissertation analyzes the period of late modernism (roughly 1930-1965) by attending to an understudied subgenre: fictions that depict the experiences of the dead in the afterworld. The project originated from my observation that a number of late modernist authors resorted to this type of writing, leading to the question of what made them do so. Such a project addresses the periodization and definition of late modernism, a period that has received relatively little critical attention until recent years. It also contributes indirectly to the study of European culture before and after the Second World War, identifying clusters of concerns around common experiences of belief and time during the period. To approach this question, I adopt a situational approach. In this type of reading, I attempt to reconstruct the situations (both literary and extra-literary) of specific authors using historical and biographical material, then interpret the literary work as a response to that situation. Such a methodology allows me to ask what similarities between situations led to these convergent responses of afterlife writing. My primary objects are afterlife novels and plays by Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Wyndham Lewis, Flann O’Brien, and Samuel Beckett. I find that the subgenre provided late modernists with the literary tools to figure and contest changes in experiences of belief and time in mid-20th century Europe. The situation of modernism is marked by the loss of belief in the world, a failure in the faith in action to transform the world, and the serialization of time, the treatment of time as static iv repetition and change as something that can only occur at the individual rather than the systemic level. While earlier modernists challenged these trends with the production of idiosyncratic private mythologies, late modernists encountered them as brute facts, leading to a shift in aesthetic sensibilities and strategies. Belief was split between private opinion and external submission to authority, and change reappeared under the figure of catastrophe. v Contents Abstract ......................................................................................................................................... iv List of Abbreviations ................................................................................................................ viii List of Figures ................................................................................................................................ x Acknowledgements ..................................................................................................................... xi Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 1 Situations of Late Modernism ............................................................................................... 4 Subgenre as Middlebrow Mediator ................................................................................... 4 Antinomies of Late Modernism ....................................................................................... 11 Suspicion, Skepticism, and Belief in the World ......................................................... 14 The Serialization of Time .............................................................................................. 32 The Image of a Fully Built World ................................................................................ 36 Fictions of the Afterlife: Ancestry and Definition ............................................................ 45 Chapter 1: The Sense of No Ending: Meaning and Finitude in Sartre and Beauvoir ........ 67 Death, Finitude, and Meaning in Heidegger and Sartre ................................................. 67 Sartre: Huis clos ..................................................................................................................... 78 Sartre: Les jeux sont faits........................................................................................................ 97 Beauvoir: All Men are Mortal ............................................................................................. 109 Dead Life and Occupation ................................................................................................ 134 Chapter 2: Deals with the Devil: Publics and Genre in Wyndham Lewis’s Human Age 141 The Childermass: “the rivolooshums-highbrow-lowneck-racket” ................................ 145 From Childermass to Human Age I: The Letters ............................................................... 169 From Childermass to Human Age II: The Paintings ......................................................... 174 vi Human Age: The Devil’s Bargain ...................................................................................... 193 “A Creator who had forgotten how to create”: Men Without Art ............................ 197 “The strangest supernatural company”: Against the Background of the Absolute 204 “A very fragile environment”: Lewis’s Heavenly Welfare State ............................... 210 “Acting in a valueless vacuum”: The Narrative Logic of The Human Age ............... 214 “‘You are not used to time, sir’”: Deferral and Apophasis ......................................... 227 “To scorn to isolate yourselves”: Publicity and Genre ................................................ 235 Chapter 3: “Hell Goes Round and Round”: The Modernist Fantastic in The Third Policeman ..................................................................................................................................... 237 Situation ............................................................................................................................... 238 A Latecomer in the Land of Joyce .................................................................................. 238 The View from Nowhere ................................................................................................. 248 The Third Policeman ............................................................................................................. 256 Genre and the Literary Fantastic .................................................................................... 262 De Selby and Damnation ................................................................................................. 285 Bad Faith and Free Will ................................................................................................... 294 Chapter 4: “If only I could think, There is no sense in this…”: Beckett and the Impossibility of Disbelief ......................................................................................................... 306 Play ........................................................................................................................................ 309 Le dépeupleur ........................................................................................................................ 334 Conclusion ........................................................................................................................... 346 Epilogue ...................................................................................................................................... 349 References .................................................................................................................................. 351 Biography ................................................................................................................................... 369 vii List of Abbreviations Common abbreviations used throughout the text. For full citations, see the bibliography at the end of the text. AMM All Men Are Mortal (Beauvoir) ASTB At Swim-Two-Birds (O’Brien) BM The Best of Myles (na Gopaleen) BN Being and Nothingness (Sartre) BT Being and Time (Heidegger) CD The Chips are Down (Sartre) CM The Childermass (Lewis) CSP Collected Short Plays (Beckett) CSPr Collected Short Prose (Beckett) D Le dépeupleur (Beckett) DA The Dalkey Archive (O’Brien) EA The Ethics of Ambiguity (Beauvoir) EN Être et neant (Sartre) HA The Human Age: Books 2 and 3 (Lewis) HC Huis clos (Sartre) JSF Les jeux sont faits (Sartre) MF Malign Fiesta (Lewis) MWA Men Without Art (Lewis) viii NE No Exit (Sartre) PMA Pour une morale de lámbiguïté (Beauvoir) PW Philosophical Writings (Beauvoir) RA Rude Assignment (Lewis) RH Rotting Hill (Lewis) SP Stories and Plays (O’Brien) ST Sartre on Theater (Sartre) THM Tous les hommes sont mortels (Beauvoir) TP The Third Policeman (O’Brien) TS Un théâtre de sitations (Sartre) WLA Wyndham Lewis the Artist (Lewis) ix List of Figures Figure 1: Wyndham Lewis, One of the Stations of the Dead (1933, Michel P50, Edwards 245). Oil on canvas. 127 x 77.5. City of Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museums Collections. ..................................................................................................................................................... 177 Figure 2: Wyndham Lewis, Red Scene (1933, Michel P52, Edwards 246). Oil on canvas. 71 x 91.5. Tate Gallery, London. ................................................................................................... 178 Figure 3: Wyndham Lewis, Group of Suppliants (1933, Michel P48, Edwards 244). Oil on canvas. 76.5 x 61. Private collection. ....................................................................................... 180 Figure 4: Wyndham Lewis, Inferno (1937, Michel P72, Edwards 247). Oil on canvas. 152.5 x 101.8. National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Felton Bequest, 1964. .......................... 183 Figure 5: Wyndham Lewis, Portrait of T. S. Eliot (1938, Michel P80, Edwards 271). Oil on canvas. 132 x 85. Municipal Art Gallery, Durban. ................................................................ 188 Figure 6: Wyndham Lewis, Portrait of an Englishwoman (1913, Michel 146, Edwards 78). Pen and ink, pencil, watercolor. 56 x 38. The Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut (Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin Sumner Collection). ......................... 189 Figure 7: Wyndham Lewis, Jehovah the Thunderer (1941, Michel 975, Edwards 302). Pencil, ink, and watercolor. 37 x 25.5. Private collection.................................................................. 191 x

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afterlife novels and plays by Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, situation of modernism is marked by the loss of belief in the world, a failure in
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