“CONSCIOUSNESS
AND THE NOVEL” David Lodge (first published 2002)
It’s
one thing for me to voice some misgivings about the reductive tendencies of
postmodern criticism, but it’s quite another to direct you towards the type of
criticism I find more congenial. So, after a postmodern Something New, allow me
to acquaint you with a book of fine criticism as this week’s Something Old.
First
published nine years ago, David Lodge’s Consciousness and the Novel is not the
work of somebody who is ignorant of current critical modes. As well as being a
prolific novelist - and therefore somebody who knows the craft of writing from
the inside – Lodge is a formidable critic who has, among other books, produced
a tome on structuralism. He is not a reactionary. But, unlike too many
postmodernists, he does know how to write limpid and lucid prose. His criticism
is eminently understandable.
Cognitive
neuro-scientists and researchers into artificial intelligence are very
concerned with the problem of human consciousness. Do we actually know what
consciousness is? Can we describe it in scientific terms? And could it some day
be replicated artificially?
As
one scientist quoted by Lodge said “virtually nothing worth reading has been
written about consciousness” by scientists. Insights into consciousness tend to
be the province of imaginative literature.
It’s
this interface of science and the craft of fiction that is the starting point
for David Lodge’s 90-page essay that give this volume its title. It was
originally delivered as a series of lectures on an American campus The essay
concerns the way consciousness is presented in the modern novel. By examining
different styles of narration in modernist and postmodernist works, Lodge comes
to grips with how novelists imagine, conceive and describe consciousness.
It
is an illuminating and very accessible piece of criticism and has the distinct
merit of condensing, for non-specialist readers, some of the more abstruse
current literary theory.
The
other 200 pages of this book are taken up with ten reprints of pieces Lodge
originally wrote for the New York Review of Books, the Times Literary
Supplement etc. Lodge is always a fair, well-informed and commonsensical
critic, and there are insights in every piece.
The
best of the reprints is a longish essay on movie adaptations of Henry James’
novels. It is a model of precise, pointed criticism. Lodge’s main contention is
the fairly obvious one that, no matter how careful the adaptation may be,
movies trade in surfaces and have difficulty accessing the psychological layers
of a densely written novel. (This come close to my crack, in an earlier blog,
of movie adaptations of classics being akin to Classics Illustrated comics).
Regrettably, in discussing Jane Campion’s film version of Henry James’ Portrait
of a Lady, Lodge identifies her as an “Australian” director, but I don’t think
this compromises his very sensible argument.
I
do not want to talk this book up too much. Sometimes, in the reprints, the
strain of the jobbing critic peeps through. In Lodge’s piece on Philip Roth,
there’s a tension between his admiration for Roth’s technique and his distaste
for Roth’s world view. His admiring account of Evelyn Waugh’s early comic
novels is little more than a set of annotated plot summaries. I’m not sure his
efficient review of Jane Smiley’s brief biography of Dickens was really worth
reprinting, although it does say some tart things about the cult of
author-as-celebrity. The book ends with a magazine interview with Lodge himself
about one of his own novels.
Yet,
despite the perishable topicality of some pieces, this is still vivid and
informed criticism which respects the form, respects the canon, and does allow
the work to be overwhelmed by its context.
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