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Class notes and lectures on British literature

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Notes and lectures on British literature especially focused on postmodernism Ulysses, 1984, Waterland, A Clockwork Orange, First Love, Weekend, Changing places

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  • April 19, 2021
  • 34
  • 2020/2021
  • Class notes
  • Doc. simona klimková, phd.
  • All classes
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Lecture 1: Theories of postmodernism. James Joyce.
1. Postmodernism

BACKGROUND

 ruptured notions of man, humanity, progress, evolution

 the end of unified, coherent, universal view of the world

 rationality refused – human intellect is not the only significant tool

 multivalue logic – a number of existing truths, worlds - pluralism

 difficult to define: postmodernism – following modernism – movement of second
half of 20th century (1970s) mainly around 2nd World War

post-modernism – opposition towards modernism – movement that bring something new,
different in the mode (ironic, much more fun) – parody, irony, satire

define in 2 ways- follows modernism (fragmentation of world, value, ideas)


1.1. Theories of postmodernism
FRANÇOIS LYOTARD

 postmodern as a historical/ cultural ‘condition’ based on dissolution of
master/grand narratives = “incredulity toward metanarratives”

 crisis in ideology when ideology no longer seems transparent

 totality, stability and order are maintained in modern societies through the means
of ‘grand narratives’

 postmodernism = critique and rejection of grand narratives; favours ‘mini-
narratives’ – situational, local, temporary; making no claim to universality, truth,
reason and stability

reject grand narratives (like democracy is the best form of government) –
postmodernism doesn´t believe in grand narratives

postmodern period is defined by mini narratives, mini stories

,JEAN BAUDRILLARD

 ‘simulacra’ - there are no originals, only copies

Age of simulation – everything is just copy of something (Disneyland, world that tries to
simulate the real world)

Visual art, painting – one original piece of work (highest value), copies don´t have high value

FREDERIC JAMESON

 PM as a movement in arts and culture corresponding to a new configuration of
politics and economics

 “late capitalism”: transnational consumer economies based on global scope of
capitalism = postmodernism

 “history is only accessible to us in narrative form” = history requires
representation, meditation, in narrative, a story-form encoded as historical

Tries to define the movements and linked these movements with economy; social changes
linked with economic, political changes



1.2. Attributes of postmodernist literature (by I. HASSAN)
CARNIVALIZATION: characters wearing masques, being noisy, the texts being
polyphonic and playful (polyphonic- several narratives, several perspectives, masks refer
to the characters, we don´t know who they are)
CONSTRUCTIONISM: a new world is created, even the external world is seen as an
artificial construct (science-fiction)
DECANONISATION: attempt of writers to be original in a special way by not respecting
traditional rules of writing (also in modernism; tries move away from the literary canon)
FRAGMENTATION: both thematic and formal; a text may open different discourses,
employ different types of narrators, styles, registers, and literary techniques (text broken
into several smaller parts; style can be different in the smaller parts)
HYBRIDISATION: PM texts are hybrids as they do not fit in any pure genre, create a lot
of subgenres, or a mixture of various genres
INDETERMINACY: PM text subverts the rules of logical and chronological order (does
not have conclusions at all, books doesn´t have the real ending; endless cycle of reading)

, PERFORMANCE: active participation of audience; texts become meaningful in the
process of reading - in Lolita- they are trying to persuade the readers; some books have
multiple ending
SELFLESSNESS: loss of identity, double identity, search of identity (who am I?)
UNPRESENTABLE: topic of PM texts which were once considered taboo (death,
violence, sex, ...) - similar to modernism
IRONY: mode of speech in which the meaning is contrary to the words and which seeks
to mock and criticize - more playful than modernism; mock or criticize
IMMANENCE: the divine force, or the divine being, pervades through all things that
exist, and is able to influence them


2. James Joyce - 1882 (Dublin) – 13.1. 1941 (Zurich)

2.1. Life

 educated at Jesuit schools – gained a solid background in languages, and religious
and scholastic teachings

 University College, Dublin – rejected Catholicism; published articles in
the Fortnightly Review – reject religious ideas; how religion interfere into lives

 degree in modern languages; Paris – medicine

 June 16, 1904 – Nora Barnacle (wife; his muse) ; expatriates: Switzerland, Italy,
France ; day when they first met; Ulysses ; in Ireland huge celebration (main
setting of his book)

 1941 - Joyce died 13 January, at 2 a.m., in Zurich, as a result of a perforated ulcer

Author of the most complicated book; his texts are really difficult to read

Dublin is the main setting for his works; Ireland is the main theme (country highly influenced
by religion) – but he lived outside of Ireland

 36 love poems, written to be sung
Chamber Music (1907)  largely autobiographical, Joyce playing
the role of the poet and Nora the role of
the beloved

Pomes Penyeach (1927)  collection of 13 poems, a distinct
improvement in style, language &
imagery; a darker and more sombre feel
touched by a nostalgia

,  explores the artistic estrangement from
society; an artist who must choose
Exiles (1918) between a career that satisfies his wife
& friends, or a life of alienation in the
pursuit of his muse
 CRITICISM: mechanical plot, a serious
lack of objectivity, underdeveloped
characters...

 Joyce's intention = to write a chapter of
the moral history of his country, Dublin
Dubliners (1914) seemed to him the center of paralysis
 4 stages: childhood, adolescence,
maturity and public life
 Short stories – the most readable (tries
to use stream of consciousness)
 Set in Dublin, follows the citizens who
have problems
 Characters are stuck in their life,
make decision
 Epiphany
 Melancholic, pessimistic, sad

 mental and spiritual development of
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Stephen Dedalus, his alter ego - 1st
Man (1918) martyr of freedom (non serviam) -
rebels against his family, his religion,
his nation
 character appears in Ulysses
 bildungsroman
 Stephen wants to become artist, he
wants to leave Ireland to become artist
(rebel)
 “I will not serve anything because I do
not believe it”.

 16.6. 1904, Dublin; the narrative
parallels Homer's Odyssey; during the
Ulysses (1922) course of a single day, 3 characters
(Leopold and Molly Bloom, Stephen
Dedalus) wake up, have various
encounters in Dublin and drift off to
sleep 18 hours later
 Fragmented in structure
 Parody in Odyssey – Leopold is

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