ART AND THE NOVEL
K. LEELA MOHANA RAO
“Nature delivers a brazen world, but art a
golden”–this is how Sir Philip Sidney conceives art. According to him, art
creates a new world altogether for the edification and delight of the people.
Man is a social animal. He cannot keep his experiences, observations, ideas,
emotions and fancies to himself. He is under stress of a constant desire to
impart them to those about him. For this he seeks the help of art. Literature
is one such channel.
The word “literature” can be applied to any
kind of writing from medicine advertisements to works of scholarship. So
Dequincey distinguishes between literature of knowledge and literature of
power. Literature of knowledge is liable to change. Books of science and
history come under this category and they are to be revised often. Literature
of power, which we may call for convenience imaginative literature, stands the
test of time.
Literature is neither merely imitative as the
great Greek masters saw it, nor creative as the modern critics tend to suggest:
Traditional criticism uses the word “Poetry” not confining the sense to what is
written in verse. So we may call it “imaginative literature” for convenience,
in the sense that it is both imitative and creative at the same time.
Ever since Plato,
there have been three changes against imaginative writers, that they are liars,
that they encourage immorality and that they are useless.
Aristotle says that it is the “mimetic
quality” or fictitious quality
that distinguishes imaginative literature from other kinds of literature.
Literature imitates objects in the real world as much as historical and
scientific writing. Aristotle means that literature creates fictitious objects.
But Plato feels that the poet or the imaginative writer does not really “make”
but he “imitates” objects in the real world. According to him, all literature
is false because it is “imitation” and not the real thing. But the question of
falsehood arises only where a person tells of facts, past or present. The best
answer to this charge is given by
The second and third charges have been heard
even now and they are more serious ones. In the treatment of life, literature
treats both virtue and vice alike, sometimes making the one and sometimes the
other triumph indifferently. It pained Plato to see virtue often coming to
grief in the literature esteemed in his day like the works of Homer, Sophocles
and Euripides. He feels that they give us to understand that many evil livers
are happy and many righteous men unhappy. So he condemns such literature
severely.
Ever since Freud, the values of good and bad,
virtue and evil have been changed. His teachings have made the modern writer
explore the subconscious recesses of the human mind. What our fathers dared not
mention is frankly talked about now-a-days. Thus we have a striking sexual
frankness in Jovce’s “Ulysses” or in
All art has some timeless quality because it
is related to the passions and impulses which do not change amid the vast
upheavals of the ages. This timeless quality is achieved through the union of
experience with form and beauty. This permanence is something that remains in our
mind. It is the solitary reaper that reaps and sings for herself. It is the
Greek warrior that grows old in the long years of sea-life and finally finds
his home in a mess. It is the woman who becomes a play-toy in the hands of
cruel fate. It is the mood, the place and the detachment from history. In all
great art, there is this haunting illusion as in Dickens, Hardy or Scott. Even
after the allegorical relevance ceases, books like “Gulliver’s
Travels” can be read with equal enjoyment.
David Copperfield is not an “imitation” of
an actual person who has
actually existed. But he is an imitation of a person. The sufferings of a boy
with a step-father are the same anywhere. Philip with a lame-foot in “Of Human
Bondage” has not actually existed. But his sensitivity, reactions, humility,
adoration of perfection–they are the same with every crippled person.
The third charge is damaging to our way of
life. The usefulness of literature still stands as the most controversial
question. The usefulness depends on what we take literature for. Plato wanted
literature to do the work of morality. Aristotle expects it to be no more than
what it is–an art. This leads to the trend “Art for art’s sake,” which began to
develop in the 19th century. Literatures in
With the rise of Marxism, the concept of “art for art’s sake” has almost been rejected. Marxism places man is the centre of its philosophy. The novel is the first art to attempt to take the whole man and give him expression. E. M. Forster has pointed out that the great feature which distinguishes the novel from the other arts is that it has the power to make the secret life visible.
The theory of art for art’s sake does not
suit the modern world which is beset with manifold crises–social, economical,
religious and psychological. Literature must tell the truth–the truth of all
these crises. So the modern novelists have to discard the aims of beauty and
pleasure.
Marxism insists that neither form nor content
are separate and passive entities. Form is produced by content and one with it.
So the novel is best suited to show the man who is in conflict with society,
with his fellows or with nature;
In the book “The Nature of Narrative” written
by Mr. Robert Scholes in
collaboration with Robert Kellogg, the authors proposed that there are two main
modes of narrative: the empirical and the fictional. Empirical narrative
subdivides into history, which is true to fact. and mimeses (i. e., realistic
imitation) which is true to experience. Fictional narrative subdivides into
romance, which cultivates beauty and aims to delight, and allegory, which
cultivates goodness and alms to instruct. The primitive oral epic was a
synthesis of empirical and fictional modes. Later this synthesis broke up in
the transition from oral to written forms of communication. Once again in the
renaissance, a new synthesis of the two modes produces in the 18th century, the
novel.
The novel stands to modern civilization as
the epic did to ancient civilization. The epic was a complete expression of
society. There was a balance between the characters of the epic and the society
in which they lived. “The Iliad” is more a picture of a society than of anyone
of its characters. The novel deals with the individual. In “Robinson Crusoe”,
we see a man at war with his fellows and with nature.
In modern fiction, we do not expect the
author to interrupt his story to point the moral of the situation and justify
or deplore the conduct of his characters. We see such practice with Thackery to
provide this kind of running commentary. Fielding has been blamed because he
introduced “sermons” into his novels. The difference between Scott and Fielding
is that Scott’s characters are idealizations, while Fielding’s are types. A
novelist can give his lesson more impressively through the fortunes of his
characters than by such running commentary.
The novel has emerged as a powerful social
force and is responsible for great reforms. Dickens says that “Nicholas
Nickleby” was written to expose the monstrous neglect of education in
There has been a remarkable shift of
interest in the modern world from poetry and drama to prose fiction. The novel
which is historically the product of the printing press has become the central
form of literary art. It has become the most effective medium for the portrayal
of human thought and action. Poetry and drama have their roots in oral-aural
and (in the case of drama) non-verbal modes of communication. Since the
invention of the printing press, the novel has come into prominence and novels
are not only read and studied more and more, but increasingly written as well.
As we move from a print-oriented culture to
an electronically revived oral-aural culture, the novel seems to have been facing
neglect. Some critics are of the opinion that the decay of the novel has
already started. But the novel has two prominent assets. The novel alone can
give a complete picture of life with man as its centre. It is able to show the
important inner life which is beyond the scope of the drama or the cinema.