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Realism, Allegory and Symbolism

Some Speculation about the Novel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2024

Extract

I begin with a number of propositions, which I shall try to develop in detail:

First, that allegory and symbolism are modes of analogy, that both present one thing or concept in terms of another thing or concept, even though the ways in which they do so have been contrasted and seen as vitally different.

Secondly, that the novel is, as a literary form, generally characterized by realism, and that realism as a literary technique would appear to be opposed to analogical modes.

Thirdly, that this opposition is only apparent because all literary discourse (and in a sense all language) is analogical, in so far as it is meaningful: and that this is confirmed by critical practice.

Fourthly, that the development of the novel therefore reveals a continuing compromise in which overtly analogical modes are allowed to permeate the apparently non-analogical mode of realism in the interests of meaning.

Fifthly, that in the modern period the value of realism as a technique begins to be called into question, and consequently the point of the compromise begins to be called into question, with significant repercussions on the form of the novel.

In putting forward these ideas, particularly the last one, I have been much influenced by The Nature of Narrative (1966), by Robert Scholes and Robert Kellogg. Surveying the whole range of Western narrative literature, they suggest that the primitive oral epic was a synthesis of two antithetical types of narrative, one which they call empirical, whose primary allegiance is to the real, and the other fictional, whose primary allegiance is to the ideal.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1970 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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Footnotes

*

This article is a revised and shortened version of a paper originally read to the Conference of University Teachers of English at York in 1967. It is continuous with, and in part overlaps, a later essay, ‘The Novelist at the Crossroads’, published in the Critical Quarterly, Summer, 1969.

References

page 363 note 1 Samuel Johnson,Rasselas, 1759, Chapter X.

page 363 note 2 Samuel Johnson,The Rambler, No. 4, 1750.

page 364 note 1 The Modern Tradition, cd. Ellmann and Fcidclson, 1965, pp, 367–8.

page 366 note 1 The Humiliation of Emma Woodhouse, Literary Review II (1959), pp. 547–63.

page 367 note 1 Duffy, Joseph M., ‘Emma: the Awakening of Innocence’, Journal of English Literary History, XXI (1954), pp. 3953CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

page 368 note 1 Ivor Winters, ‘Maule's Curse; or Hawthorne and the Problem of Allegory’, In Defence of Reason, 1960, p. 165.

page 369 note 1 Martin Green, ‘The Hawthorne Myth: a protest’, Reappraisals, 1965.

page 370 note 1 Selected Poetry and Prose of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. Mabbott, T.O., 1957, p.378Google Scholar.