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Monday, May 28, 2012

Literary Theory and Criticism, Part-V


Marxist Theory

The Essence of Marxist Thought

There is no scope in the present context to expound Marxist theory adequately. All that can be done is to stress the aspects of it, the essential concepts, which are relevant to understanding a Marxist approach to the study of literature. For Karl Marx, and those closest to his way of thinking, all those modes of thought, including literary creativity, are ideological and are products of social and economic existence. Basically Man’s social being determines his consciousness and the material interests of the dominant social class determine how all classes perceive their existence. All forms of culture, therefore, do not exist in an ideal, abstract form but are inseparable from the historical determining social conditions. They exist, in other words, as a superstructure to the basic economic structure of a society. This view was the exact reverse of the Hegelian belief that the world was governed by thought and the application of reason, whether it be human or divine. Philosophising about the world alone was insufficient for Marx; the most important thing was to change it. In The German Ideology (1846), Marx and Friedrich Engels wrote of religion, morality and philosophy as ‘phantoms found in the brains of men’. But in letters which he wrote in the 1890s Engels acknowledged that both he and Marx recognised that art, philosophy and other forms of human consciousness could alter the human condition and had a degree of autonomy. The special status of literature was also recognised by Marx in the Grundrisse. Greek tragedy was for him an anomaly because it seemed to represent a timeless, universal achievement but was actually produced within a society with a structure and ideology which he could no longer consider valid. How could such a phenomenon continue to give aesthetic pleasure and be regarded as expressing universal truths?

Socialist Realism

Socialist Realism is the term usually applied to the statesanctioned theory of art favoured predominantly in the Soviet Union, and therefore known as Soviet Socialist Realism, but it was also the dominant party aesthetic in other Eastern European countries under the political domination of Russia after the Stalinist period and the Second World War. Basically the ideal of nineteenth century Russian realist literature was set up as the most suitable norm for a communist aesthetic but it was given a doctrinaire edge. All other forms of modernist experimental art and literature were considered to be the decadent offspring of late capitalism. Only lip service was paid to the notion of artistic freedom. In practise, a writer could not hope to get his work published if he or she did not write to please the party. Lenin had made this explicit in his essay Party Organisation and Party Literature (1905), in which he asserted that writers were free to write whatever they wanted but, if they wanted to get their work published in party journals, they would have to toe the party line. As all journals were soon to become affiliated to the party, this provided writers, effectively, with only Hobson’s choice. Literary critics were encouraged to praise those writers of the past who had revealed insights into the social problems and developments of their time, even though they might have been of bourgeois origin themselves. Leo Tolstoy, Honoré de Balzac and Charles Dickens therefore came in for special praise. All literature had also to address the interests of the people as a whole. This quality was known as narodnost. And it had to present a progressive and, of course, communist outlook for the future of society.

Georg Lukács (1885–1971)

One of the most admired Marxist critics is Georg Lukács, a Hungarian-born philosopher and critic. He is associated with socialist realism but reveals great subtlety in his arguments. He greatly admired many of the great Realist works of the 19th century, especially when they revealed underlying contradictions in society. It was for this reason that he praised the novels of the Prussian writer Theodor Fontane, especially his short novel Schach von Wuthenow (translated as A Man of Honour), which provides a disturbing critique of the Prussian code of honour. For Lukács, it was ‘the pinnacle of German historical narrative art’. In Lukács’ eyes, true Realism did not just depict the appearance of the social world but provided ‘a truer, more complete, more vivid and more dynamic reflection of reality’. A Realist novel does not provide an illusion of reality but is ‘a special form of reflecting reality’. A truly realistic work provides a sense of the ‘artistic necessity’ of the scenes and details presented. The writer reflects, in an intensified form, the structure of the society depicted and its dialectical development. Lukács’ ideas are expounded most fully in two major works: The Historical Novel (1937) and Studies in European Realism (1950). In The Meaning of Contemporary Realism (1957), he attacks especially modernist literature. He rejected the static, ahistorical epic structure of James Joyce’s work, and found modernist writing, in general, lacking in historical awareness. Beckett and Kafka were condemned for these reasons. For Lukács, modernist writers were too concerned about evoking an inner stream of consciousness and the obsessions of isolated individuals. This he related to the effects of living in late capitalist societies. One of the few contemporaries he did admire was Thomas Mann, whom he considered an exponent of a genuine ‘critical realism’. During a stay in Berlin in the 1930s he also attacked the use of modernist techniques in the writings of left-wing radicals. His attack on the playwright and theorist Bertolt Brecht has become particularly famous.

Bertolt Brecht (1898–1956)

After reading Marx in the 1920s, Bertolt Brecht, the German-born playwright, focused his earlier anarchistic attitudes into more clearly defined communist convictions. He wrote many clearly didactic plays (the Lehrstücke) and more complex thought-provoking plays, mainly in exile from Nazi Germany. His theoretical works on theatre practice revolutionised modern drama. He rejected entirely the Aristotelian tradition of theatre: plot, fate and universality were out. He employed techniques to bring about what he called a Verfremdungseffekt, meaning literally ‘the effect of making strange’ and usually translated as ‘alienation’. It has much in common with the concept of ‘defamiliarisation’ coined by the Russian Formalists. By such methods he attempted to show up the contradictions in capitalist society as something strange and unnatural, requiring change. His actors were not to create the illusion of real people with whom audiences could identify but should present caricatures revealing the inner contradictions of the characters, the ways in which their behaviour was moulded by social forces and their need to survive.
One aspect of Brecht’s theory, which brought him into conflict with Lukács, was the rejection of formal unity in a work. His ‘epic’ theatre consisted of a series of loosely related episodes, rather than an all-embracing structure. The unities of time and place were rejected. He did not believe in any ‘eternal aesthetic laws’ and, for him, any dramatic device was acceptable if it served his purpose. He strongly opposed what he saw as Lukács’ attempts to establish ‘purely formal and literary criteria of realism’. He demanded constant adjustment to the ever-changing nature of political reality: ‘to represent it the means of representation must alter too.’

The Frankfurt School

The name ‘The Frankfurt School’ has come to be applied to a group of philosophers and thinkers of other disciplines who were members or were associated with The Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt am Main in Germany. They practised what they called ‘Critical Theory’. The leading figures in the group were Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer and Herbert Marcuse. The institute moved to New York during the Nazi period but settled back in Frankfurt again in 1950. Their analysis of modern culture and society was very much influenced by their experience of Fascism.

Theodor Adorno (1903–1969)

The leading and most influential writer on aesthetics in the Frankfurt School was undoubtedly Adorno. He criticized Lukács’ view that art could have a direct relationship with reality. For Adorno, art, including literature, is detached from reality and this is the very source of its strength. Popular art forms only confirm and conform to the norms of a society but true art takes up a criticalstance, distanced from the world which engendered it: ‘Art  is the negative knowledge of the actual world.’ He saw the alienation evident in the writings of Proust and Beckett as proving such ‘negative knowledge’ of the modern world.

Walter Benjamin (1892–1940)

Walter Benjamin was closely associated with the Frankfurt School but he was very much a maverick thinker. His early writing was on Goethe and German Baroque drama. His best known essay is undoubtedly The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, in which he argued that modern means of reproducing works of art, especially photography and film, have changed the special status of a work of art. This is also true, of course, of the reproduction of musical performances. Benjamin argues that works of art once used to have the quality of uniqueness which he calls their ‘aura’. Even in the case of literature which, of course, had long been available in multiple copies, this aura had been maintained. Many kinds of modern works of art are actually designed with a view to reproducing them, as is the case with art prints, for example. In the case of the cinema there exist multiple copies without there being a real original from which the film is derived. Benjamin believed this to be a good and beneficial development, making art no longer something remote and awe-inspiring but accessible to intelligent lay analysis. One might argue against Benjamin, of course, that the result has been only to make much art more remote, obscure and unfathomable. In another essay, The Author as Producer, he stresses the need for socialist writers and artists to take full advantage of the potential of the new possibilities of reproduction, and to use them consciously to political effect. There is no guarantee of changing people’s thought merely through the ready availability of works of art.

Lucien Goldmann (1913–1970)

Lucien Goldmann was a Romanian by birth but lived in France. He rejected the notion of individual genius in the arts. He believed that works of art and literature reflected the ‘mental structures’ of the class which engendered them. Great writers possessed the ability to formulate and express these structures and enable people to perceive them through the works. He developed a distinctive form of Marxist literary theory he called ‘genetic structuralism’ which, as the name suggests, also owes much to structuralist thought. He was interested in tracing the relationships between a work of literature, predominant modes of philosophical thought and ideology and specific social classes. There may be no obvious surface parallels but they share structural similarities on a deeper level. For this process of comparing parallel deep structures he used the term ‘homology’. His most famous working out of the procedure was in his study of the French dramatist Racine (Le Dieu Caché). In Pour une Sociologie du Roman (1964), he provided a ‘homological’ study of the modern novel compared with the structure of market economy.

Louis Althusser (1918–1990)

Louis Althusser’s ideas are also clearly indebted to structuralism. He abhorred the notion of order and systems with central controlling principles. Social structures consist of various levels in complex interaction with each other and often in mutual conflict. One level may dominate the rest at any time but this is itself determined by economic factors. In A Letter on Art, Althusser considers art to be located somewhere between ideology and scientific knowledge. A work of literature he sees in a somewhat negative light: it neither provides a full understanding of the real world, nor does it simply lend expression to the ideology of a specific class. But it does make us aware of the ideology which governs both its and our own existence in society.
In fact, Althusser presents in his writing two theses concerning ideology. The first is that, ‘Ideology represents the imaginary relationship of individuals to their real conditions of existence’. The second thesis relates ideology to its social origins. For Althusser ideology works through the so-called ‘ideological state apparatuses’. These include the political system, the law, education, organized religion etc. Ideology has a material existence in the sense that it is embodied in material systems. Thus, everything we do and everything we involve ourselves in is, in some way, ideological. When we believe that we are acting according to free will it is really in accordance with the dominant ideology. In accordance with his belief that social structures are not systems with central controlling principles, he also asserted that ideology in capitalist societies was not dominated by the self-interest of a small group who use it to exploit others. Those who profit from the system are as blind to its effects as others. One of the causes of this blindness is the very force of ideology itself. It convinces us that we are real ‘concrete subjects’. We see as natural whatever ideology wants us to see as part of the natural order of things.
Critics influenced by Althusser’s ideas have attempted to show how, in novels, readers are often invited to become part of a world which is depicted as essentially free, peopled by individuals who behave in autonomous ways. Such novels also give the reader the illusion that he or she is free when, in fact, they are also in the grip of an ideology. Many Marxist critics, however, have not been happy with the implied deterministic view of ideology set down by Althusser. He seems to allow no scope for nonideological thought or action.

Antonio Gramsci (1891–1937)

The Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci did not contribute specifically to literary theory but his ideas have influenced many Marxist literary critics, notably the British critic Raymond Williams. Gramsci’s concept of ideology is less deterministic than that of Althusser and allows room for dissent. Writing in the 1930s in Fascist Italy, Gramsci was fully aware of the power of ideology and of ‘the consent given by the great masses of the population to the general direction imposed on social life by the dominant fundamental group’. For Gramsci, it was possible for the individual to resist what he called the ‘hegemony’: the domination by a ruling ideology through ‘consent’ rather than ‘coercive power’. Under ‘hegemony’ the citizens of a state have internalised what the rulers want them to believe so thoroughly that they genuinely believe that they are expressing their own opinions. But this hegemony does not, as Althusser believed, blind all members of the society to the truth of the situation. It is possible to become aware of the dominance of ‘hegemony’ and resist its effects, even if it is impossible to escape completely its influence. This is the loophole of which the artist can take advantage.

Pierre Macherey

Another important influence on British critics in the 1960s and 1970s was Pierre Macherey. In A Theory of Literary Production (1966), Macherey considered a text not as something ‘created’ but as ‘produced’. Whatever authorial intentions might be and whatever aesthetic standards might prevail at a given time, the literary text is never completely ‘aware of what it is doing’. He regarded literary texts as being pervaded by ideology and it was the job of the critic to look for the cracks and weaknesses in the surface of the work, caused by its own internal contradictions. The title of a later essay summarises this view as The Text Says What It Does Not Say. In order to reveal the ideology in a text the critic must focus on what the text represses rather than overtly expresses. The cracks are the gaps where the author failed to make a thought conscious. To some extent, this approach pre-figures that of poststructuralism but, whereas Macherey considered his approach to be scientific and leading to objectively true interpretations, poststructuralists believed that there was no such thing as objective truth.

Raymond Williams (1921–1988)

The British critic Raymond Williams took as his task a complete reassessment of the British tradition of cultural thought. In Culture and Society 1780–1950 (1958), he defined culture as ‘a whole way of life’. He was very much aware that in any given society there is more than one single culture, each with its own ‘ideas of the nature of social relationship’. The coexistence of different cultures does not mean that there cannot also be a common culture: ‘…there is both a constant interaction between these ways of life and an area which can properly be described as common to or underlying both.’ While granting the ‘vital importance’ of literature, he was instrumental in establishing a broader base for cultural studies: ‘For experience that is formally recorded we go, not only to the rich source of literature, but also to history, building, painting, music, philosophy, theology and social theory, the physical theory, the physical and natural sciences, anthropology, and indeed the whole body of learning.’ Williams’ work is sometimes compared and contrasted with his contemporary Richard Hoggart, who also broadened the base of literary studies to include popular literature. Hoggart has a warm engaging style and a strong sympathy for working class culture, as evidenced in his study The Uses of Literacy: Aspects of Working-Class Life with Special Reference to Publications and Entertainments (1957).A major difference between Hoggart and Williams is that of the nature of their political commitment. Williams’ approach was determinedly historical and materialist and in fact he eventually described it as ‘cultural materialism’. It was only in Marxism and Literature (1977) that he finally identified himself as a Marxist.

Terry Eagleton (1943–)

In Criticism and Ideology (1976), the British critic Terry Eagleton revealed the influence of Pierre Macherey’s concern to find the cracks and contradictions in a text. In this early work, Eagleton was interested not in what made a text coherent but what made it incoherent. The influence of Althusser is also evident. There may be apparent freedom in a text but it is not free in its reflection of the dominant ideology. In this work Eagleton analysed a number of canonical British novels, exploring the relationships between literary form and ideology.
In the late 1970s Eagleton was greatly influenced by poststructuralism. He came to believe that deconstructive theories could be used to undermine all absolute forms of knowledge, although he also rejected the deconstructive denial of the possibility of objectivity. He now believed that it should be the role of the critic to analyse critically accepted notions of what constituted literature and reveal the ideologies behind them. He thought that the critic should interpret non-socialist works ‘against the grain’ to reveal a socialist perspective.
Eagleton shares with Walter Benjamin an admiration for Brecht. Benjamin admired Brecht’s own re-reading of history ‘against the grain’, and this inspired Eagleton to devote a whole book to Benjamin: Walter Benjamin or Towards a Revolutionary Criticism (1981). Benjamin viewed history as always obscuring the significance of events by selective reactionary memory, and Brecht made audiences see history from the perspective of the downtrodden.
Eagleton’s ideas undergo constant change. He has utilised the psychoanalytic theories of Jacques Lacan and the ideas of Jacques Derrida. His own Literary Theory, An Introduction (1983, second edition 1996) provides a witty and perceptive analysis of major literary schools, concluding with doubts about the very viability of literary theory as an independent discipline. A recent book by Eagleton, After Theory (2003), takes a whole new perspective on the future of cultural theory. I shall take up some of these issues in my own final chapter.

Fredric Jameson

The American theorist Fredric Jameson has been greatly influenced by the Frankfurt School. He explored Marxist theories of literature, especially with reference to their dialectical aspects, in his Marxism and Form (1971). He returns, in fact, to a reconsideration of Hegel’s philosophy, in its investigation of the part to the whole. Any object is bound up in a larger whole, is part, for example, of a specific historical situation. The aspects of literature that a critic analyses must also always be seen in relation to the critic’s own historical situation.
In The Political Unconscious (1981), Jameson retains his earlier dialectic approach but also incorporates various other, often conflicting modes of thought, such as structuralism and poststructuralism. The influence of Althusser is also evident. Jameson sees ideologies as ‘strategies of containment’, providing acceptable explanations but suppressing contradictions. The solutions provided by works of literature also suppress historical truths. He also believes that the ‘story’ is an essential ‘epistemological category’ of the human mind. We can only understand the world in terms of stories. Scientific, cultural and historical accounts are all created narratives. Jameson took his title from Freud’s concept of repression which he extends from the individual to the collective level: ideology represses revolutionary ideas. He provides a complex rethinking of Marxist thought about social structure and follows the view of Althusser that society is a ‘decentred structure’ in which various levels retain some degree of autonomy. The heterogeneity of society is reflected in the heterogeneity of texts: literature is essentially a mirror of the society in which it is produced. All kinds of interpretative methods can be applied to a text, and will reveal something actually present in the text but each method of interpretation applied will also reveal something about the ideologies governing both the author’s and the critic’s worlds. In Postmodernism, or The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (1991), Jameson maintains that postmodernism is not only a currently fashionable style but the ‘cultural dominant’, in Roman Jakobson’s sense, of our times. It conditions the way we perceive and interpret our entire world.

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