Saturday, 24 November 2012

ARCHETYPAL APPROACH TO LITERATURE



NORTHROP FRYE developed archetypal approach in his study of Blake in a book entitled fearful symmetry: a study of William Blake and later in his book, anatomy of criticism .Frye wants that criticism should “acquire something of the methodological discipline and coherence of the sciences”. This, he feels, can be achieved by assuming a total coherence in criticism based on a hypothesis about literature itself. And the primary source of this coherence, according to Frye, is the recurrence, with various degrees and displacement of certain archetypes in literature of all periods and cultures.
The term archetype signifies ‘narrative designs, character types, and images which are found in a variety of works of literature’. Archetypal criticism owes its origin to JAMES.G.FRAZER’S ‘THE GOLDEN BOUGH’ and to the depth psychology of C.G.JUNG who applied the term to what he called ‘the primordial images’, ‘the psychic residue’. This type of criticism was first experimented by Maud bodkin in his archetypal patterns in poetry.
Frye argues that criticism has every characteristic of a science. Hence, meaningless, value Based, pseudo Judgments should be done away with. To Frye ‘criticism as a science is totally intelligible’ but literature as the subject of a science is an inexhaustible source of new critical discoveries.
“Poems, like poets, are born and not made”. A poet task is to deliver the poem in as uninjured a state as possible. Frye argues that criticism cannot be systematic unless there is a quality in literature. If many poets use the same images and symbols, the problem cannot be biographical. This is why Frye searches for a pattern in literature. An archetype, therefore, becomes a unifying category of criticism as well as a part of a total form. Literature should be read in its totality – from the primitive to the sophisticated. This search for archetype is a kind of literary anthropology.
The main disagreement between Freud and Jung was over the ‘LIBIDO’ which Jung believed to be more than ‘sexual’. Jung postulated their existence of collective unconsciousness, that is: racial memory inherited by all members of the human family and connecting modern man with his primitive roots.
The ‘collective unconscious’ is manifested in the recurrence of certain images, stories and figures called ‘archetypes’ – the psychic residue of numberless experiences of the same type.
Psychological maturity, or ‘individuation’ entitles the individual’s recognition and acceptance of archetypal elements of his own psyche, for which Jung coined the descriptive terms ‘shadow’, ‘persona’ and ‘anima’ .
Jungian psychology has been in many ways more congenial to literary mind than Freud’s. Freud always has regarded himself as an empirical scientist, and science has been seen as a threat to literary values from the romantic period onwards.
Jung, much more sympathetic than Freud towards visionary, religious and even magical traditions, readily endorsed the claims of literature to embody knowledge of a kind particularly vital to alienated, secularized modern man; and his assertions that “it is his art that explains the artist not the insufficiencies and conflicts of his personal life” is obviously nearer in spirit to Eliot’s tradition and individual talents than Freud’s creative writers and day dreaming.
Jung’s theory of collective unconscious tied in neatly with the anthropological study of primitive myth and ritual, initiated in England by Sir James Frazer’s “golden bough”. Out of this fusion of literature, anthropology and psychology evolved a kind of literary criticism in which the power and significance of works of literature or of national literatures, or of the whole of literature is explained in terms of the recurrence of certain archetypal themes, images and narrative patterns.
“Man is a symbol making animal and the only such animal”. There has been an increasing respect for the symbolism of primitive man and Specially for the myths and legends through which he characteristically expresses himself. Then the symbolizations of primitive man are not necessarily childish and absurd but make their contribution to ‘truth’. G. VICO had elaborated the theory that myth was a kind of poetic language. VICO is unable to distinguish poetry from myth. They may be “diverse shoots from the same parent stem” springing from the same impulse of symbolic formulation. Primitive man knew no difference between “object” and “image”. This kind of synthesis also accounts for archetypes. The modern myth critics have been powerfully influenced and impressed by the evidence that primitive man still lurks within each of us. To these critics, the connection between myth and literature provides a new key to criticism. The critics who hope to find in myth the key to artistic creation make much of the number of aspects that poetry shares with dream. The process that Freud calls the “dream – work” shows similarities with “poetic work”. In both poetry and dream, logical relationships are frequently evaded or transcended by the mere juxtaposition of images.
According to Frye, the poet is only the efficient cause of the poem, but the poem, having a form, has a formal cause that is to be sought. Frye finds this formal cause to be the archetype. What Frye calls “total” literary history moves from the primitive to the sophisticated. So Frye glimpses the possibility of envisaging literature as the “complication of a relatively simple group of formulas that can be studied in a primitive culture. In the light of this possibility, the search for archetypes becomes a kind of literary anthropology, concerned with the way that literature is formed by pre – literary categories such as ritual, myth and folk tale”.
Frye has suggestions for bringing about a production – line technique. The literary specialists who will deal the text in question are disposed as follows; first the editor then the rhetorician and philologist, the literary psychologist, the literary social historian, the philosopher and the historian of ideas, and finally at the end of the line, the literary anthropologist. Frye consistently refers to the work of art as a “product”, an “organic commodity” that is capable of being sorted, classified, and graded – a notion that receives some support from the way in which Frye chooses to suggest how a poem comes into being:
“The fact that revision is possible, that the poet makes changes not because he likes them better but because they are better, means that poems, like poets are born and not made. The poets’ task is to deliver the poem in as uninjured a state as possible, and if the poem is alive, it is equally anxious to be rid of him and Screams to be cut loose from his private memories and associations, his desire for self – expression, and all the other novel strings and feeding tubes of his ego. The critic takes over where the poet leaves off”.
-       NORTHROP FRYE.
“In this lively analogy the poem is evidently the babe, the poet, the mother, and the critic, the midwife and nurse, who ties off the cord, tells the mother the infant is a boy or girl, washes it up for presentation to the outside world, and presumably gives it an anthropological classification” and “takes its measurements”.
“Yet Frye’s analogy fails to cover what must analogy finally be the crucial question of whether the poem is still – born and inert, or alive. He merely alludes to this question with the cautionary “if the poem is alive”, or is it merely a document, wooden, dead, lifeless, a mere “exhibit”, without literary merit?”
Richard chase says in his the quest for myth, the term “myth” is clearly a value term. A poem that is vibrantly alive is mythic and vice versa; for chase absolutely identifies poetry and myth. He writes “myth” is only “art”. A poet may use a myth more “artistically” or more “powerfully” than another. Or, one may argue that some myths are more powerful than other myths and therefore yield greater poems. Considerations such as this suggest that “mythic” and “archetypal” criticism provides no way of circumventing the basic problems of traditional criticism.
INCEST AND MYTH
Ø Archetypal approach to literature is connected with abstractions at one end with the concept of the “collective unconscious” of Jung and at the other end with the studies in social anthropology. Claude – Levi – Strauss’ essay incest and myth establishes the links between archetypal criticism and anthropology. The incest prohibition is the basis of human society. Prohibition of incest creates bonds of alliance between non – consagineal groups. This conclusion was reached by establishing the systematic nature of each kingship terminology and its corresponding set of marriage rules.
Ø Though the author is a social anthropologist his work on myth and mythologies impriges on literary studies. His intellectual aims and methods have found wider application in the field of literary criticism. There is something attain to “structuralism” in these aims and methods. Structural linguistics goes beyond the description of any particular language to purpose the “deep structures” that are common to all languages. Levi Strauss tries to analysis the various manifestations of the incest taboo in the same way. He pursues the incest than into mythology and succeeds in uncovering a remarkable structural relationship between south American folklore, the Oedipus myth and the grail legend structuralism, therefore, is concerned to discover universal truths about the human mind. This kind of study tends to become algebraic.
Ø Anthropologists cannot easily prove the universality of these rules in the totality of human societies including the present ones. In the end we would have done nothing but elaborate a language whose only virtues would reside in its coherence and its ability to account for phenomena thought to be very different until recent times.
Ø Problems like incest prohibition can be approached in the form of a theme for mythical thought. Here again the anthropologists concern for myth is similar to that of the archetypal critic. Levi Strauss takes up a story from the folklore of the IROQUOIS and ALGONQUIN Indians for discussion. It is the story of a young girl subjected to the amorous leanings of a nocturnal visitor whom she believes to be her brother. Everything seems to point to the guilty one physical appearance, clothing, and the scratched cheek which bears witness to the heroine’s virtue. Formally accused by her, the brother reveals that he has a counterpart or “a double”, for the tie between them is so strong that any accident befalling the one is automatically transmitted to the other. To convince his incredulous sister, the young man kills his double before her, but at the same time he condemns himself, since their destinies are linked. By way of misleading the mother of the victim, a sorceress, the sister has to marry her brother, the latter passing for the double he has killed. Incest is so inconceivable that the revengeful old woman never suspects the hoax. The theme of this story is similar to that of the Oedipus legend.
Ø The very precautions taken to avoid incest in fact make it inevitable. A sensational turn of events arises from the fact that two characters, originally introduced as distinct, are identified with each other. The incest between brother and sister of the Iroquis myth would constitute a permutation of the oedipal incest between mother and son.
Ø The Indians myths describe clowns who set riddles to the spectators as having been born of an incestuous union. They also associate owls with riddles. The correlation between riddle and incest seems to obtain among peoples separated by history, geography, language and culture.
Ø A riddle may be defined as a question to which one postulates there is no answer. If we invert the terms of this definition we produce an answer for which there is no question. There are myths based on this inversion. The holy grail legend depends upon the hero not asking the expected question. In a semantic system, chastity is related to ‘the answer without a question’ as incest is related to “the question without an answer”.
Ø In short the archetypal approach to literature is an approach which looks in poetry for echoes a “mythical identification; it finds general types implicit in the specific elements of a given poem, and then interprets those types as symbols of human desires, conflicts and problems. It thus emerges as a kind of symbolic approach. One may trace the image of “the decent into hell”, for examples, from early myth and ritual, to homer, Virgil, medieval romance, Dante and upto hart crane’s subway section of the bridge and to T.S. Eliots’ “THE HOLLOW MEN”, with one’s own repressed guilt. Such mythical identifications need not depend upon the explicit and conscious presence in a work of actual names , places and events from mythologies – the procedure rests rather upon finding more or less unconscious similarities and resemblances.
Ø Many critics have questioned the soundness of the theory and of the archetypal approach. In many poems symbols are primarily personal and to interpret them archetypal is to over read them, if not to misread them altogether. Even if a poem does contain universal symbols, they may not symbolize those kinds of depth meanings which archetypal critics are looking for. This approach tends to be reductive in its view of particular and unique works of art. It tends to blur the essential distinctions between good poems and bad poems.            

RESTORATION ENGLAND



By the term restoration England, we mean England of the period between 1660 and 1688. All the institution and practices which were suppressed during the puritan regime were restored after Charles 2 was brought back to England as its king. Political monarchy, parliament and law were all brought back to their former status. In religion episcopacy or rule of the bishops, and prayer book were reinstated. As far as social life was concerned the nobles and the gentry once again became the acknowledged leaders of provincial and national life.
              During the restoration period Anglicanism became the acknowledged religion of upper class people. In general the parish church was patronized by the local squire. Of course there were cases of cold war between the parson and the squire. Addison, in one of his spectator essays “sir roger at church”, refers to this, “the parson and the squire live in a perpetual state of war. The parson is always preaching at the squire and the squire to be revenged on the parson, the Quakers suffered religious persecution under the “Clarendon code”. The Roman Catholics were shut out from all participation in local and national government.
              An event of great political magnitude that took place during the restoration period was the formation of political parties. The upper class was divided politically into Whigs and Tories. The Tories like the cavaliers before them were the section of society that formed rural England. They were always supporters of the king. The Whigs like their roundhead fathers were the landowning class in close association with commercial interests. They always stood for the rights of the parliament.
              Experimental science was spreading fast in England. For the first time in the history of mankind it was discovered that science could be used for the development of agriculture, industry, navigation, medicine and engineering. The royal society of science was founded in 1662 under the patronage of king Charles and of his cousin prince Rupert, himself a scientist. It was not yet time for conflict between science and religion. The great scientists of the time, Robert Boyle the chemist, the Isaac Newton the physicist, were religious men who repudiated the skeptical doctrines of the time. The importance of science was so much acknowledged that the first history of the royal society was written by no less a person than Rev. Sprat, who afterwards became bishop of Rochester. With the spread of scientific inquiry most of the superstitions lost grip on the people. They began to realize that plagues and fires and floods were not necessarily the divine punishment for sin. Belief in witches and witchcraft became less widespread even through it continued to have some hold on the rustics. However, it has to be admitted that the new scientific spirit to some extent at least undermined the character of religious faith.
              The theatres which remained closed during the puritan regime once again started functioning; but of course with certain changes. The whole playhouse was roofed in and the stage was artificially lighted with candles. There were drop curtains and painted scenery. More than that the women’s parts were no longer taken by well - trained boys . Instead women’s parts were acted by women actresses as much as the play. Not all actresses were talented enough. Nell Gwynne’s personal vigor and charm counted more perhaps than her professional skill. The drama was localized in London, and even there it appealed not to the ordinary citizens but to the court and fashionable people of the town. Unfortunately enough it was for their vulgarity tastes and interests that the drama of the early restoration period catered. The restoration plays noted for their vulgarity created a hostile attitude to the drama in the minds of decent people, with the result that till the late nineteenth century well-brought-up young people were not allowed to visit the theatre. One of the most popular dramas of the early restoration period was Wycherley’s country wife, one of the most Vulgur plays ever produced in English. However, things changed for the better in the next few years.
                 In the restoration period censorship was rigid and yet the total output of literature was considerable. The first licensing act was passed in 1663 by the cavalier parliament, chiefly with the aim of preventing the publication of seditious and puritan writings. Otherwise permission was given easily enough for publishing the great epics, paradise lost and paradise regained. In spite of the rigid censorship, private libraries were becoming more and more common, of course, varying in size and quality. Private libraries of renowned persons like Samuel Pepys contained many valuable volumes. Similarly the library owned by the cotton family had many remarkable books. In many of the yeomen families there was at least a bookshelf consisting of modest collection. In 1684, for the first time, a public library was established in London by tension, the benevolent clergymen who later became the archbishop of Canterbury. This exemplary man of god also built a large building on the courtyard of    St. Martin’s church and used the upper part for a library and the ground floor for a workroom for the poor. However, in 1696, eight years after the glorious revolution, to the relief of all freedom- loving Englishmen, the licensing act ceased to operate.
                 With the restoration of the monarchy the fortunes of the cavalier families with landed property changed for the better. Nevertheless, to the small  squire  who  lived  on  the  proceeds  becoming  unfavorable . The two largest sections of the society were those who cultivated their small bits of land and the wage-earners. The agricultural as well as industrial workers did not have any means of subsistence except their wages. In general the wages were regulated by the justices of the peace. On the whole, both in trade and industry trade unions were not common.
                It should be said to the credit of the English that they have always maintained a high standard of living. It has become one of their national characteristics. The people of the restoration period were no exception. The staple diet of the time was bread, beer and meat. Vegetables and fruit formed a small and meat a large part in English meal of that period. Almost half the population ate meat daily; the other half had to be satisfied with eating meat twice a week.
                Sports and pastimes had become rare during the puritan rule. They were even prohibited especially on Sundays, fearing that sports and games would spoil the solemnity of the Sabbath. However, they were revived during the restoration period. Shooting partridges was almost the privilege of the squires alone. The netting of birds on the ground was a fashionable sport of the time. Fox hunting was becoming more and more popular. More exiting and popular than the hunting of deer or fox was the pursuit of the hare with a pack of hounds, the gentlemen on horseback and the common folk running, headed by the huntsman with his pole. Other popular sports were wrestling, boxing and sword fighting, or bull and bear baiting, and various rough kinds of football. But cockfighting was the most popular of all pastimes, watched by huge excited crowds. Horse-racing was become more prominent owing to the royal patronage.
                The wealth of the country was not at all evenly distributed. Certain parts of the country were very rich. In general the central countries were richer than the rest of the country. Of the various countries, the richest was Middlesex. The seven countries of the north were poor and the poorest was Cumberland. The poverty of the northern countries was strange because they had the biggest coal mines and textile mills.
               Two great national calamities of the restoration period were the plague and the great fire. The plague of 1665 carried away nearly one-fifth of the London population. The great fire of 1666 raged for five long days, destroying all the churches and other buildings of the city. The great fire was in a sense a blessing in disguise because the reconstruction of the city on modern lines was possible after this calamity. The reconstruction of London was accomplished in a comparatively short period of four or five years.          
                            

                                                                          
               
   

SALVATION ARMY



                             The humanitarian movement of the nineteenth century was the salvation army, founded I n1865 by William booth, popularly known as general booth. He was originally a travelling preacher of Methodism, but later he broke from that church and started his own mission. He drew the attention of the people to the degraded section of society namely the homeless and unfed, to the drunkard, the criminal and the harlot. It work and care for the first time, emphasized social work and care for the essential part of the Christian mission. He employed novel and sensational methods which easily captured the imagination of people. To bring street bands and colored uniforms into the service of protestant religion was really something new. The movement in due course spread to other countries also.
                                  Mention must also be made of the movement started for the eradication of drunkenness which had become a big social evil. It was very often the cause of much domestic unhappiness and even crime. The movement was known as teetotalism or total abstinence. Great caricaturists of the time, like Hograth and George Cruikshank, helped the movement by drawing many pictures . himself a fanatical tetotaller Cruikshank drew a series of horrifying pictures, showing the progress of the love of liquor                        

INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION



INTRODUCTION:
                          At the beginning of the 18th century England was still chiefly an agricultural country. The cities except London were small. Great changes were to take place in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. Right from the middle of the eighteenth century human power was being fast supplemented by machine power in the process of manufacture the domestic system was giving way to the factory system and a substantial part of the population had already congregated in towns and cities to devote itself purely to industrial work.
INVENTION OF MACHINARY:
                          The heart of industrial revolution was the invention of machinery and the application to the process of manufacture. Machine took the lead in this respect. In the manufacture of cotton goods the first advance was made when Kay’s flying shuttle, patented in 1733, came into use. It enabled the weaver not only to weave wider cloth but also to double his output. The flying shuttle came into use into the cotton weaving factories about 1760 and caused a scarcity of yarns. In 1765 Hargreaves improved the method of spinning yarns by constructing the spinning jenny.
ROLE OF COAL AND IRON:
                      The basis of the mechanization of the industry were coal and iron. At the opening of the 18th century coal mining was already on important industry in England. Benjamin huntsman had invented method of rolling iron into bars by means of rollers instead of hammering it. A sufficient supply of good iron could now be obtained which could be put to many uses and inventors were not, slow in finding new uses for it. The first cast iron bridge was built across the Severn in 1779 and the first iron ship in 1790 was launched.
RISE OF FACTORY SYSTEM
                 The direct result of the application of machinery to the process of manufacture was the rise of factory system. Production had become sufficiently large – scale and it was rather difficulty to allow it to be carried on by individual workers.
CONSEQUENCES OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
                  The industrial revolution transformed the English social and economic structure to a very great extent.
EMPHASIS FROM AGRICULTURE TO INDUSTRY
                   New industries sprang up offering new goods to satisfy man’s desires. Thus there was an enormous increase in individual and national wealth.
RISE OF THE FACTORY SYSTEM
                 The old domestic system was replaced by the new factory system which produced goods on a very large scale. This was inevitable because the domestic system could not compete with the new factory system.
INCREASE IN WEALTH AND RISE OF CAPITALISM
                 Large-scale production resulted in greater profits to the owners. It also resulted in competition between the producers. Thus a small class of capitalists grew up which dominated the economic life of England.