ebook img

RIVER NOVEL & COMPLEMENTARY DISCOURSES ADAM IRVING PhD 2016 PDF

347 Pages·2016·7.25 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview RIVER NOVEL & COMPLEMENTARY DISCOURSES ADAM IRVING PhD 2016

RIVER NOVEL & COMPLEMENTARY DISCOURSES ADAM IRVING PhD 2016 RIVER NOVEL & COMPLEMENTARY DISCOURSES ADAM IRVING A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the Manchester Metropolitan University for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Contemporary Arts the Manchester Metropolitan University. Cheshire 2016 2 ABSTRACT The complementary discourse explores the function and value of narrative and why mankind seems to have always seen events, connected or unconnected, as stories. It investigates how we process and perceive fiction and compares narratives found in non-fiction, police witness statements, films and diaries to consider why the human brain seems hard-wired to transform events into narrative. The accompanying novel, A River, is set in Manchester over a three hundred year period. The events in the chapters are presented in reverse order; from the 1990’s to the 1720’s, beginning with the chronological end of the tale and working towards the starting point. The chapter’s regression highlights how a familiar location is constantly in flux and sometimes shares little with the same place of the past. Time and location are both treated as characters, playing important roles in the personality of the city. The buildings and streets, events, food and language have all been researched for accuracy, either first hand or using diaries, films, maps and photographs. The novel occupies a grey area between fiction and history. The narrative actively avoids the traditional novel formulas of historical fiction and magic realism and is intended to be an accessible experimental novel, questioning the idea of what a story is. 3 A River: Novel When the ice began to melt, the water searched for the easiest route to take. It flooded, engulfed and found its way lower and lower as if starving and in search of food. Then there was a river. A deep and powerful torrent of cold water, which carved its way ahead. The river ran before there was anything for it to run through. It gushed under, over and through untamed land, trees, plants and debris until it joined another river, crashing into a steep rocky place where the two met. The area swarmed with life, through decade after decade after decade and the living things gave little regard to the passing of time. Small groups of families arrived, who cleared and worked the land, the best they knew how. They made fields, stone walls, wooden bridges, timber homes and created ponds by channelling the river. The river was too powerful to be moved though. The dwellers had arrived onto its territory and had to live with its ways. The people brought horses and cattle, ducks and chickens. They gouged muddy pathways where they walked, over and over again. They built stronger, sturdier houses out of stone and daub from the nearby lake and their nameless tracks spiderwebbed out further and further as more feet travelled them. People liked to name things, so the dirt tracks between the crofts were given names, the fields and ponds were given names and suddenly, people owned the names, owned the land around the river. They rented it, leased it, bought and sold 4 leaves of paper, which proved they owned stretches and sections of it; divided the old pieces and renamed the new pieces. Wells were dug, springs were found, churches were built, windmills erected, people were born and buried, footsteps from the place where they had lived. And the place, which wasn’t a place before, now was. And a river ran through it. The clusters of houses became a community, a location, a hamlet, villages and then a town. The people were much the same as people everywhere, they drank and fought and laughed. The wildlife pulsated and overflowed so much that even a blind hunter wouldn’t have gone hungry. There were trout and eels in the river, boar in the forest, otters, weasels, storks and heron. And this place, was Manchester. And a river ran through it. 5 I 6 Dear Baby, I’ll have to call you that as you don’t yet have a name. I would like to tell you how lucky you are to be alive. I have to tell you lots of things, about how you came to be born, and why you will live. I know this is a doomed plan to begin with though. By the time you are old enough to understand and appreciate what I have to say, I will have long since left this world. Thinking ahead has been part of my life for so long now, but I have not yet solved the problem of how I can get these sentiments to reach you in twenty years’ time, when you will be more inclined to understand the implication of their contents. I would like more than anything, for you to see how important some of the things I have to say are. I understand, perhaps better than anybody, that our actions and what we promise have enormous effects on our families, and I want you to be aware of that too. The things you might say flippantly always have consequences and an aftermath. On the day you were born, your father, Keith Serrah had taken the train from Rochdale to Manchester. I was in the same carriage as him, three or four seats away and when he got off, I was following a small distance behind. He looked white and sickly that day. He stopped every few hundred yards to catch 7 his breath. This was most fortunate for me however, as I had reached an age where my body no longer kept up with the pace of my mind or of other people. Walking had become strenuous a long time ago and it had been decades since I could muster the energy to run. I must tell you before I continue, that your father didn’t know me, but I knew him. Perhaps better than anyone. It’s highly unusual that I should be writing to you, whom I don’t know, about your father, who never knew me and who nearly never knew you too. Everything about my life is unusual. To me, normality itself is an unusual thing. That day, I could see the look on his face, I saw it on the train. I’m sure that he wasn’t thinking, as he should have been, of your impending birth. He didn’t seem to be contemplating marriage or your mother either. I’d seen the nervous look on his face before to know what he was thinking. * Keith Serrah was slouching on an aisle seat, nursing a visibly bad hangover. He was pale, sweaty and nervously looking out for the ticket inspector, who was making his way towards him with the casual glee an inspector has when they know they are about to ask for a ticket which does not exist. As the inspector sauntered over, he was suddenly distracted by another passenger in the next carriage. He looked at Keith, lifted a finger in the air and told him he’d be right back. Twenty seconds later 8 the train pulled into the dilapidated splendour of Manchester Victoria station and Keith made a swift exit, walking away but stopping every few seconds to breathe the cold air and mop his brow. 1994 had been a bad year for him, but this year would be different he told himself. ‘Everything will be fine’, he said out loud. He headed for the exit and walked along Todd Street and sat on the steps of a closed shop. He put his right hand in his jacket pocket and produced a wad of money. He flicked at the edges of the notes, held together with an elastic band. For a few minutes he’d experienced clarity, but now, he felt that events were being swept downstream faster than he could keep up with. He sighed. His gaze wandered from the money to the discarded chips on the pavement in front of him, then to the gravel car park opposite, the cars crawling down Fennel Street, above the buildings and to the tip of the cathedral peeking out over the roofs. Only then was he was reminded of the purpose of the money. What it was supposed to be for. Supposed to be for. The words echoing round his head. There was still plenty of time for it to be taken to its rightful place. Keith stood up, but didn’t start walking. He felt still felt nauseous and peered through the window of a jeweller’s. Shutters down and all valuables removed from the display, there was nothing to look at except price tags. He was thinking ahead. Far ahead. Thinking that, if, by some chance he didn’t pay the caterer, then Kelly would be furious and no doubt call their wedding off. The jeweller’s large hand-painted sign announced they paid good prices for gold. Why would he need a wedding ring if he wasn’t getting married? “Change?” said a feeble voice at his feet. 9 He looked down at a bundle of sleeping bags and stolen hospital blankets and spotted the top of the homeless man’s head. Change. He wondered if he could change. He ignored both questions. “Happy New Year then, ar’kid,” the voice said burrowing further into the dirty blankets. He was thinking of other things that could happen in the next few hours, dreamily imagining the sweet clatter of casino chips, the comforting rhythm of cards being shuffled. He was inhaling the plumes of cigarette smoke which would drift in front of him and tickle the back of his throat as he sat looking over at the warm glow of the cashing-in window. Not that he ever frequented that side of the casino. The usual pattern was that he doubled his money, lost a little, lost a little more, until he was back to where he started and then, in an attempt to double it again, would lose it all. It was the trap that lured him and every gambler in the building. Hope. The hope of winning. No matter how futile things got, it was always theoretically possible to win it back. And if he lost everything, he told himself he wasn’t really to blame, luck was just against him. He was at his most pathetic upon leaving the casino. As he collected his coat from reception, he would always give the staff a wide fake smile, intended to signify that he hadn’t lost any money. As he reached out for his coat, he would mime the action of dropping a coin in the tip bowl, flicking the coins already there with one of his fingers to create the impression a coin had landed. He quickly forgot about this as he waited for an empty, faded, orange 135 bus to go past. He watched it thoughtlessly and then crossed the road making his way over the virtually empty car park towards the Corn Exchange. He tried to recall the real reason he had come to Manchester and dismiss the fantastical musings of his 10

Description:
least twelve of Aesop's fables which bear similarities with the Buddhist Jataka Tales and the Hindu fictional scenario, it is at odds with Daniel Pennac's claim that: 'one of the crucial 107 Daniel Pennac, The Rights of the Reader
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.