There are drawbacks to being, as Fredric Jameson undoubtedly is, one of the most important literary critics and theorists of his generation. His work is so widely taught and read that people know the outline of what he is going to say before he says it (and indeed, this book is part of a series entitled The Poetics of Social Forms, which investigates the far-from-straightforward relationship between history and art). His weak points are well observed: overly complex and sometimes questionable prose, with quirky stylistic turns (oddly dropped definite articles, like hipsters writing about âPixiesâ or âArctic Monkeysâ for Rolling Stone); de haut en bas-sounding judgements (âAmericanâs greatest nineteenth-century novelistâ, âTolstoyâs greatest criticâ, âZola is the Wagner of nineteenth-century realismâ); arguments that indicate where they are going rather than actually, well, going there.
But resorting to snarkiness would simply be stupid in front of a book that so manifestly displays Jamesonâs many virtues as a truly great critic, whether or not one agrees with his starting points. Ideas and insights tumble out, page after page. His overarching argument here is that realism, the main form of the novel, is a sort of negotiation between oppositions. The central opposition is between the time of the story (crudely, the sequence of beginning, middle, end) and what he calls âaffectâ, the representation of the sensuous âpresentâ. Take, as an example, Dickensian Christmas scenes. Readers respond to their âaffectâ: to the representation of the stinking, bone-marrow cold of the starving London poor or to the descriptions of delicious aromas and warm firelight of a luscious feast. These âaffectiveâ scenes stand out from the rushing plot of the story (enough to become stand-alone clichĂ©s in television advertisements) and yet are woven back into it. To this, Jameson wants to add a historical date: âoutrageously to affirmâ that this sort of representation of affect begins in Europe in the 1840s and so characterises a type of modern bourgeois realism.
But this larger schema is only a starting point for a multitude of insightful and imaginative ideas about literature, too many to list. Some examples: a contrast between the representation of emotions (as conscious states) and the representation of affect; a taxonomy of different forms of narrative that deal with war (eight, including âthe institution of the armyâ and âthe collective experience of warâ). Or, in an outstanding final chapter on âThe Historical Novel Today: Or, is it Possible?â which ends with David Mitchellâs Cloud Atlas, Jameson offers as his answer (yes, it is possible!) a reading of science fiction novels as historical novels: appropriate for a book dedicated to the science fiction novelist Kim Stanley Robinson. Ideas such as these â which are only parts of Jamesonâs larger argument â might do as books (or even careers) for lesser critics.
More than this, the discussions of writers in detail, especially the extended analyses of Tolstoy, seem to light up the page. This is not usually said about Jamesonâs work, but here â after it has warmed up, as it were â the writing moves easily and illuminatingly from book to book, and from critic to critic. Moreover, they are often not the usual marxisant suspects: Kenneth Burke shapes a chapter on war and representation; and Jameson retrieves KĂ€te Hamburger â I had not heard of her or her 1957 work The Logic of Literature â from obscurity. And the book is full of little gems: just when he seems only to focus on canonical greats, he turns to Götz and Meyer, a wonderful and obscure novel by David Albahari, or to Philip K. Dick, or Robert Altmanâs film Short Cuts, or Timur Bekmambetovâs Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
Philosophers used to say that, in Tolstoy, while the writing was astounding, the ideas were weak and confused. Could something similar be said here, that the criticism is acute but the theory is open to question? It is at the level of the big picture that one might choose to disagree with Jamesonâs argument, but one should not dismiss it. It is not always easy to read the work of someone who just wonât sit on his laurels: but in this case it is worth it.
The Antinomies of Realism
By Fredric Jameson
Verso, 432pp, ÂŁ20.00
ISBN 9781781681336 and 81916 (e-book)
Published 3 November 2013
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