The Novel is Dead. Long Live the Novel by Dan Holloway
Who am I? How do I define myself? Of all the seething morass
of components that make up my life, which ones survive every sifting through
the filters of experience and introspection to become the things by which and in
relation to which I think of myself – however much I may be right or wrong in
such thinking, if it is possibly to be mistaken about who one is – as me?
I’m not going to enter (too much) into that minefield of
defining what constitutes the psychological core of the novel, or try to make
comparisons across the arts by saying the novel is the literary symphony, a
unified, Hegelian, progressive, developmental narrative. Though the fact that
people *do* have such discussions is a good enough segue into the observation
that for me as a writer the novel, or longform fiction, offers a way of
exploring characters’ sense of identity, the choices they make or rather the
process by which they come to decide how they decide who they are.
In order to capture what it is to struggle to find one’s
identity, the form of our fiction needs to embark on a similar struggle to
attempt to mirror the form of that struggle for identity. The question for the
novel is whether the traditional narrative arc can be an appropriate form.
Now, it would be very easy to suggest that the fragmentation
of the modern world has changed the way that we define ourselves and in doing
so has moved the goalposts for the novel. I think it would be truer to say our
current experience of life has made obvious what was always true – that
self-discovery is not a linear journey, is not a series of either/or choices or
resolved conflicts. That model is a fiction that Platonism, Stoicism,
Judaeo-Christian salvation-historical narrative, and ultimately and decisively
for the novel, Hegel and Romanticism, have led us towards. As Hume and
Nietzsche explain, the reason we have bought into this notion of self-discovery
as questing journey is straightforward enough – it’s a convenient
simplification of the complexities of life. If we didn’t simplify things by
creating a “line of best fit” fiction for ourselves we would never get beyond
the first step of the process – we would never progress (see how insidious that
idea of progress is!).
It has never been that simple, of course, and we see partial
recognitions of this even within the overarching religious narratives of
redemption in the early modern world. Late sixteenth century Puritan thinkers,
for example, talked at great length about the economies of life – the different
spheres of being in which we find ourselves and the way to balance those
spheres – the church, the household, the family, society – each of those is at
one and the same time a closed system and yet a system that has to interact
with all other systems in the life of the individual.
But religion ultimately allowed all those interesting
questions to be put to the back of the mind, to be subsumed beneath the
metanarrative of personal redemption.
It was in the early twentieth century that those questions
suddenly came right back to the cultural forefront. Wittgenstein’s language
games are the direct descendants of William Perkins’ economies, only by the
time of the Vienna Circle , Bloomsbury
and Modernism, the religious roof had been sliced off and what was left was
simply a sea of equal and competing categories, a giant hypermarket from which
we have to shop for our identity. Modernism fought valiantly to find forms to
offer some kind of mirror of this overwhelming choice. Broken narratives, new
syntaxes, expressionist art, Dadaism and Situationism – all to one extent or
another are answers to the question of what identity does – or doesn’t – mean
in a world that has no metanarrative. As previous generations had found,
though, the effort and complexity of these attempts proved too much for
Modernism to keep its head above the waterline of culture for long and the
subtle shift from equal but competing narratives to the equal but non-competing
narratives typified by Andy Warhol soon came first to deconstruct the question
of identity through Postmodernism, a rigorous intellectual attempt to advance
from Modernism that soon outgrew itself into the rather flabby shrug of the
intellectual shoulders that says “Why bother with the question of identity?”
not in an interesting but in a lazy way.
What the atomisation of modern communication has done is
re-opened the case file that Postmodernism closed. We can no longer escape the
fact that many of us find ourselves part of many communities each of which
places competing demands on our time. Postmodernism has by and large stripped
us of the conceptual equipment to deal with these competing demands and we feel
that lack of mental structure as an acute anxiety, and in the not-so-dark hours
when our neighbours sleep but our Facebook friends all over the world are
waking we find ourselves once again whispering those questions about the
balancing act of identity.
As writers, this reawakening of identity-anxiety cannot but
confront us with a fundamental question about the forms our writing takes. How
can we take ourselves seriously as writers and adopt the narrative arc? How can
we deal in resolved conflict, character growth, obstacles overcome, beginnings,
middles, and ends and still consider ourselves commentators on life rather than
contributors to the opiate fug of self-deception that needs to deliver a bigger
and bigger hit of implausible linearity with every iteration? We can’t. By all
means we can choose to be part of the machinery of cultural anaesthetics. But I
genuinely believe that it is impossible for a serious reflective artist to
write a story with a beginning, a middle and an end.
We need to wrestle with form. We need to do justice to a
notion of identity that is based on complexity, on the selection of a few
seemingly random strands from a giant quilt, on matrices not polarities, on the
non-linear, on the confused, on the unbeginning and unending, on world-building
that is not closed but porous I every possible way. How we do that each of us
will have to wrestle with on our own and maybe collectively.
In the novel Songs from the Other Side of the Wall,
I took some tentative steps by having the central character realise the choices
through which she had always considered her life (art vs industry, East vs
West, city vs country, lover vs family, modern vs traditional) were simply
props she held onto to keep her from stepping into life in its fullness. In TheMan Who Painted Agnieszka’s Shoes,
I went further and played with three unrelated narrative strands, one of them
in the first person plural. There were points of connection and disconnection
between them, and within them there were realities and unrealities, characters
trapped inside smartphones, online personas, political and private faces of
characters, masks, art installations that appeared from nowhere offering
commentary on the places where they materialised, personifications of
counterfactual desires, and an absolute lack of commentary on which aspects
were or weren’t “real” – within “reality” or any of the realities within the
unreality of the story. For the past year I’ve been wrestling with
twentyfoursevendigitalwonderland, a book that takes things further still and
tells the “story” of the last day of its protagonist’s life without using words
– just numbers, a challenge to the notion that our identity is only formed by
our conceptualisation it, in words, and has nothing to do with our raw
experience of it. Using language at all strikes me as at least a partial
capitulation to the hegemony of the fiction of narrative. Art had that moment
of disjunction with self-representation with Abstract Expressionism. Literature
has had its moments of doubt, its cut and pastes and automatic writing, but has
never really cut the ties.
How you wrestle with the written form is a matter for you to
decide. But wrestle you must.
Comments
Pauline - yes, language is certainly part of what makes us human - it is what we use to make sense of our experiences - but as such it is removing us from them in order to make sense and we are locked into the idea both that we have to make sense of the world and that language is the only way to do it. So one very important thing the writer can do is question whether these assumptions are right/necessary. Of course, there are further problems because numbers are a language just like any other (as Russell shows when he uses logic to unify mathematics and syntax). I think a novel written in numbers is also a key way of describing life in the digital age
To challenge the form of the novel without disappointing the reader is hard - and sometimes even if you achieve it, it feels like a trick.
Sometimes I think it is necessary to just let go of the novel form, which is still essentially a 19th century form, and use words in another way.
As for
But I genuinely believe that it is impossible for a serious reflective artist to write a story with a beginning, a middle and an end.
For many years (in plays as well)I 've played around with having beginnings, middles and endings but NOT in the usual places. CHASING WAVES clips at the ebookfestival site explore this. My 1999 play Love is an Urban Myth is ALL about this and the trilogy I'm currently 'wrestling' with is also about this too.
I am going to read and re-read what you've written and think and think about it. Thank you. I like it when someone sticks their head up and has something significant to say! All this AND I get to see HUNGERFORD BRIDGE tonight at 9pm.
Thanks Dan. Ceud mille (1000 times)
Beginnings, middles and ends in the wrong places sounds very cool - proper Modernist cut-up. It's interesting thinking about how we think about our lives in the light of that - how do we experience our autobiography? It's not just that we don't remember a clear and continuous line, it's that for every point on that line the way we remember it is tinted by every other point
The trad, careworn novel form is getting a huge adrenalin injection through self-publishing as new writers faithfully cling to the moribund beginning, middle, en narrative, charcater arc and redemption.
I am fascinated why so many people come to writing and choose to express themselves through writing a novel. Why does someone want to write a detective story and spin us a yarn we'vbe probably heard/read hundreds of times before?
I can only think it is to do with their identity. That because their life is not all neatly joined up and linear, they assert some control by producing a fictional narrative in which a life is joined up and linear. It's probably related to why grown ups read Harry Potter, why people see an Olympic cyclist gold medal winner and then go out and buy a £1000 bike, why half the women in this country bhave opted for an off-the bpeg mass produced erotic fantasy by numbers read in the 50 Shades phenomena.
The novel isn't dead. It's without life, but it is cryogenically twitching believing it is respiring...
To put it another way: something that is chaotic doesn't necessarily capture complexity and chaos - at leas not effectively.
'An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way.'
— Charles Bukowski
;-)
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Who-says-that-serious-literature-is-dead/120325654771866
Lee, what is Helen DeWitt doing? Can you elaborate?