Exchanges: the Warwick Research Journal. Volume 2 (1), October 2014

Similar documents
LT218 Radical Theory

Examination papers and Examiners reports E040. Victorians. Examination paper

Program General Structure

Deconstruction is a way of understanding how something was created and breaking something down into smaller parts.

List of Illustrations and Photos List of Figures and Tables About the Authors. 1. Introduction 1

Advanced Higher English Project-Dissertation Topics: Examples with Commentary

Texts: The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd, Hamlet, by William Shakespeare,

Tragedy in The Turn of the Screw: An Answer to Ursula Brumm*

English. Know Your Poetry. Dedications. Stills from our new series

Cultural studies is an academic field grounded in critical theory. It generally concerns the political nature of popular contemporary culture, and is

AN INTRODUCTION OF THE STUDY OF LITERATURE

English - Higher Level - Paper 2

Social Theory in Comparative and International Perspective

A-LEVEL CLASSICAL CIVILISATION

Give students a broad understanding of the ways in which animals are represented in twentieth century literature in a range of genres

MODEL ACT SYNOPSIS AND ANALYSIS TOOL

COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION SAMPLE QUESTIONS

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

When Richard Wright s Native Son was first published in 1940, its sensational, violent

Capstone Courses

Cambridge Pre-U 9787 Classical Greek June 2010 Principal Examiner Report for Teachers

Book review: The theatrical public sphere, by Christopher B. Balme

Postcolonial Literature Prof. Sayan Chattopadhyay Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur

Discourse analysis is an umbrella term for a range of methodological approaches that

Cambridge International Advanced Subsidiary Level 8673 Spanish Literature November 2010 Principal Examiner Report for Teachers

Leering in the Gap: The contribution of the viewer s gaze in creative arts praxis as an extension of material thinking and making

Watcharabon Buddharaksa. The University of York. RCAPS Working Paper No January 2011

Foundations of Modern Social Theory

Mass Communication Theory

Answer the following questions: 1) What reasons can you think of as to why Macbeth is first introduced to us through the witches?

Reviewed by Rachel C. Riedner, George Washington University

English English ENG 221. Literature/Culture/Ideas. ENG 222. Genre(s). ENG 235. Survey of English Literature: From Beowulf to the Eighteenth Century.

Qualitative Design and Measurement Objectives 1. Describe five approaches to questions posed in qualitative research 2. Describe the relationship betw

Representing Ovid Seminar SAA 2016 Large Group Questions. Douglas H. Arrell University of Winnipeg

English Courses 2017

Literary Criticism. Literary critics removing passages that displease them. By Charles Joseph Travies de Villiers in 1830

Postcolonialism and Religious Studies. Course Syllabus

Introduction to American Literature 358: :227 AHp Major Topics and Authors in American Literature 358: :228 AHp

FACTFILE: GCE ENGLISH LITERATURE

A Brief Overview of Literary Criticism

APHRA BEHN STAGE THE SOCIAL SCENE

Critical Spatial Practice Jane Rendell

Introduction to American Literature 358: :227 AHp Major Topics and Authors in American Literature 358: :228 AHp

English IV Literature and Composition Advanced Placement Summer Reading Assignment Ms. Ducote:

Programme School Year

University of Bristol - Explore Bristol Research. Peer reviewed version License (if available): Unspecified

An Analysis of the Enlightenment of Greek and Roman Mythology to English Language and Literature. Hong Liu

Danville Area School District Course Overview

Reference: Chapter 6 of Thomas Caldwell s Film Analysis Handbook.

DEPARTMENT OF M.A. ENGLISH Programme Specific Outcomes of M.A Programme of English Language & Literature

CHAPTER - IX CONCLUSION. Shakespeare's plays cannot be categorically classified. into tragedies and comediesin- strictly formal terms.

The Shimer School Core Curriculum

KRISHNA KANTA HANDIQUI STATE OPEN UNIVERSITY Padmanath Gohainbaruah School of Humanities HOME ASSIGNMENT FOR MASTER IN ENGLISH FIRST SEMESTER, 2016

Caribbean Women and the Question of Knowledge. Veronica M. Gregg. Department of Black and Puerto Rican Studies

ENGLISH LITERATURE. Preparing for mock exams: how to set a question A LEVEL

AQA A Level sociology. Topic essays. The Media.

UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017

The Polish Peasant in Europe and America. W. I. Thomas and Florian Znaniecki

ENGLISH LITERATURE (SPECIFICATION A) Unit 4

Black Marxism And American Constitutionalism An Interpretive History From The Colonial Background To The Ascendancy Of Barack Obama

The Jungle Social Messages in Literature

French Classical Drama: Corneille, Moliere, Racine. Alan Haffa

What is literary theory?

What is Postmodernism? What is Postmodernism?

Ideological and Political Education Under the Perspective of Receptive Aesthetics Jie Zhang, Weifang Zhong

D.K.M.COLLEGE FOR WOMEN (AUTONOMOUS),VELLORE-1.

Classical Studies Courses-1

KALAMAZOO COLLEGE ACADEMIC CATALOG. Professors: Bade, Fong, Heinritz, Katanski, Mills, Mozina, Salinas, Seuss, Sinha (Chair), Smith

Anyone interested in George Herbert Mead has much occasion to rejoice. Review Essay/ Essai Bibliographique. Mead

THIS IS A NEW SPECIFICATION. This is a Closed Text examination. No textbooks or sources of information are allowed in the examination room.

Unit Essential Question: How does knowledge of motifs reveal and enhance our understanding of central ideas in literature and art?

Chetek-Weyerhaeuser High School

LT118 Introduction to Critical and Cultural Theory

Christopher D Addario. Exile and Journey in Seventeenth-Century Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, viii pp. $85.00.

Essential Learning Objectives

Open-ended Questions for Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition,

Futility Uselessness due to having no practical outcome.

Shot through with Ambiguities : Review of Simon Joyce, The Victorians in the Rearview Mirror. Mark Llewellyn (University of Liverpool, England, UK)

St. Katharine Drexel Prep Summer Reading Information

Marx, Gender, and Human Emancipation

The play can be seen as a study in violence, and as such it can also be seen as being highly relevant to our own time.

Antigone by Sophocles

PRESENTATION SPEECH OUR CONTRIBUTION TO THE ERASMUS + PROJECT

CONTENTS. i. Getting Started: The Precritical Response 1

COURSE: PHILOSOPHY GRADE(S): NATIONAL STANDARDS: UNIT OBJECTIVES: Students will be able to: STATE STANDARDS:

Unsettling Partition: Literature, Gender, Memory (review)

Decolonizing Development Colonial Power and the Maya Edited by Joel Wainwright Copyright by Joel Wainwright. Conclusion

This course aims at familiarizing graduate students with strands of political philosophy

Renaissance Old Masters and Modernist Art History-Writing

William Shakespeare ( ) England s genius

Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and

Interview by Franziska Brückner of Netzwerk MiRA, March 2009.

Emotions from the Perspective of Analytic Aesthetics

English (ENGL) English (ENGL) 1

Privacy, Playreading, and Women s Closet Drama, (review)

OCTOBER 25 LONDON PRESS RELEASE

Critical Strategies for Reading. Notes and Finer Points

Responding Rhetorically to Literature and Survey of Literary Criticism. Lemon Bay High School AP Language and Composition Mr.

Contents. Editorial Note. ISA Forum, Vienna ISA World Congress Publication Highlights. Announcements

The Romantic Age: historical background

Transcription:

Exchanges: the Warwick Research Journal Volume 2 (1), October 2014 http://exchanges.warwick.ac.uk Literature and Conflict: One-Day Postgraduate Conference at the University of Birmingham Annie Dickinson

Literature and Conflict: One-Day Postgraduate Conference at the University of Birmingham Annie Dickinson (University of Birmingham) Abstract The inaugural one-day postgraduate conference hosted by the School of English, Drama, American and Canadian Studies at the University of Birmingham on June 20 th 2014, invited postgraduate students and academic researchers to explore the multiple relations and interactions between literature and conflict. Three plenary speakers from institutions across the country, as well as three panels of postgraduate students from the University of Birmingham, gave papers which examined such diverse topics as the issues and debates around the textual representation of violent conflict and war, literature as an expression of personal inner conflict, and audience responses to theatrical violence. Papers and subsequent discussions raised multiple interesting questions about literature and conflict, prompting a re-evaluation of both terms. Keywords: literature; conflict; war; violence; representation; text 168

Literary texts and their creators, from the classical Greek epic to the twenty-first century novel, have attempted in multiple and wide-ranging ways to engage with (and in) conflict. The inaugural one-day postgraduate conference hosted by the School of English, Drama, American and Canadian Studies (EDACS) at the University of Birmingham on June 20 th 2014 explored the diverse interactions between conflict and the written word, bringing together more than thirty postgraduate students, researchers, and academics. Three plenary speakers, along with three panels of postgraduate students from the University of Birmingham, at both Masters and Doctoral level, spoke on texts and topics from a wide spectrum of genres and historical periods, and asked the audience to rethink their definitions of the terms literature and conflict. Motivated by the centenary of the First World War, the other organisers and I were initially interested in the extent to which literature is able to effectively represent war and other violent conflicts. This question has sparked a great deal of debate in literary and cultural criticism: how can the impulse towards an artistic response to conflict be reconciled with the fear that the violence and horror of war cannot be truthfully represented in traditional literary forms? This tension between conflicts and their literary representations, as pointed to by Theodore Adorno s famously controversial phrase, to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric (1981: 34), is perhaps due for reconsideration in a Western, media-driven society, in which war and violence are everyday presences on our television and computer screens. A number of our speakers explored issues around representation, including plenary speakers Dr Jarad Jon Zimbler (University of Birmingham) who discussed the success and failure of literary representations of apartheid, and Dr Natasha Alden (University of Aberystwyth), who focussed on a second generation fictional response to the First World War. The first of our three plenary speakers, Zimbler, opened the conference with a paper titled J.M. Coetzee and the Truths of Colonial Violence. Via a discussion of Coetzee s novels, written during the height of apartheid in South Africa, Zimbler explored the power that literary art has to express the truth content of the lived experience of colonial violence. Central to Zimbler s arguments was his claim that a shift is needed in 169

the study of postcolonial texts, which so far has not placed enough emphasis on literary technique, referred to as craft. In order to fully understand the ways in which truth may be reached though craft, Zimbler suggested that the critic must consider the totality of choices available to the artist: as well as the actual materials for writing with, this includes the words, subjects, forms, genres and techniques which she or he has access to at a given moment. Considered in this way, the postcolonial text is crafted out of the postcolonial conflict that is the moment of its production. Zimbler s approach also has applicability outside of the sphere of postcolonial studies: the relation of literary craft to the conditions of production has the potential to shed light on texts produced at any historical moment. Zimbler ended his paper with a literary comparison of the novels of two writers: Alex La Guma and J.M. Coetzee. He argued that that La Guma s novels, for example A Walk in the Night (1962) and The Stone-Country (1967), are generally characterised by an excess of overly descriptive or writerly language. They are self-consciously literary to the extent that the reality or truth-content of the violence that they describe is eclipsed. The result Zimbler described as a failure to look squarely at the evils of apartheid. Coetzee, conversely, was presented as an example of aesthetic success in the representation of conflict. Citing passages from Dusklands (1974), Zimbler demonstrated the ways in which Coetzee s novels react against those of writers like La Guma. In comparison, Coetzee s style is sparse, bare and brutal, allowing the truths of colonial violence visibility. This aspect of the paper revealed a further interesting intersection between literature and conflict: art, Zimbler made clear, is relational, with negative, conflictual relations between texts as important as positive influence. While Coetzee had direct experience of South Africa under apartheid, our second plenary speaker, Dr Natasha Alden, dealt with the fictional representation of conflict by an author with no direct experience of that conflict. Her paper was titled Repression, revenants and illegible handwriting: sexuality, gender and perspective in Pat Barker s Regeneration. Alden s research focuses on second generation world war fiction: novels, like Regeneration (1991), that centre on conflicts which, for both their authors and 170

readers, are historical. Alden looked closely at Regeneration, which centres on (and fictionalises) psychologist William Halse Rivers Rivers (1864-1922), who treated officers, including Siegfried Sassoon, for shell shock during World War One. Yet she also considered a number of the first-hand historical sources that Barker used to write her novel: accounts from Rivers patients and samples of his handwriting for example. By putting these primary sources into dialogue with the fictional text, Alden s paper raised a number of points about the relation between history and fiction in representing real life conflict. One important point that emerged from the talk was the way in which history and fiction intersect: history itself is always given a narrative structure by the historian that produces a record of historical events (White, 1978). Historical fiction such as Barker s, then, can be read as enacting a similar process, albeit in a much more explicitly fictional and literary way. Other papers also considered the issue of representation, particularly of colonial and postcolonial conflicts. Sarah Chatterley, for example, examined George Orwell s representation of imperialism and the relation between the white man and the native in his early novel Burmese Days (1934), to argue that while Burmese Days is not a perfect anti-imperialist novel, it effectively showcases the failings of imperialism, and influenced postcolonial writers Chinua Achebe and Edward Said. On the same panel, Jerome Wynter discussed strategies of resistance to discourses of imperialism and slavery in Victorian poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning s Poems before Congress (1855) and Casa Guidi Windows (1851). As one commenter noted, both Chatterley and Wynter chose to focus on writing from within the culturally dominant group, rather than that of the oppressed minority or racial other. The question of how far one group is justified in representing the conflicts of another was dealt with particularly well by Wynter, who referred to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak s work on representation and the role of the intellectual in allowing the oppressed subject a voice in Can the Subaltern Speak? (1988). 171

It quickly became clear that the umbrella theme of literature and conflict could in fact cover far more than the literary representation of violent conflicts external to the text. Many of the speakers suggested new ways of connecting and understanding both terms and the relationship between them. Papers explored the ways in which writers might utilise conflict to literary ends: how texts themselves can function as sites of battle and dispute, the role played by literature as an expression of inner or mental conflict, and the manifestations of wider religious, political and cultural conflicts in literary texts. Both William Green and Elizabeth Cook considered the expression of wider religious and philosophical conflicts in literature of the seventeenth century. Green looked at religious conflict on the Jacobean stage, reading John Fletcher s tragicomedy, The Island Princess (1621) as an example of a more nuanced portrayal of Catholicism compared to its usual demonization in the drama of the period. Cook focussed on Milton s Paradise Lost (1674), to suggest that the text exhibits a conflict between two world-views: an idyllic prelapsarian vision of biocentrism, in which humans, animals and plants are seen as members of a wider biosphere, and a postlapsarian anthropocentrism, which places the human self at the centre of the universe. Lucy Rowland also focussed on conflicting world-views in the early modern period. Her paper argued that the transformations of attitudes effected by scientific discovery in the early seventeenth century are realised psychologically in the mental conflicts of three of Shakespeare s tragic characters: King Lear, Macbeth and Timon of Athens. Speaking on the same panel, Molly Bridges also considered mental conflict. The act of writing poetry, for the early modern writers Bridges considered, was a way of warding off or alleviating madness. Literature for these writers, Bridges suggested, is a balm for conflict, a way of healing a conflicted self. Judith Roads too found a positive association between text and conflict, as made clear by her corpus-based inquiry into the ways in which early Quakers used conflict and dispute in their tracts and pamphlets. She concluded that it was frequently a campaigning tool by which they spread their message and recruited followers. 172

The final talk of the day, from the third of our plenary speakers, Dr Rebecca Yearling (Keele University), Getting caught up in the action: Violent Spectacle and the Theatre Audience, continued the afternoon s focus on early modern literature. Plays like Shakespeare s Titus Andronicus (c.1594), John Marston s Antonio s Revenge (c.1600) and John Webster s The Duchess of Malfi (c.1612), all of which contain an excessive amount of stage violence, are today performed more than they ever have been since the seventeenth century, and Yearling explored the responses that audiences might have to such violence in the early modern period and today. Most interesting was her discussion of the difficulty in controlling audience s responses, and the risk of unintended reactions to violence. To illustrate this she used the example of Antonio s Revenge, arguing that while the spectator desires the punishment of the evil duke Piero, the excess of the violence (Piero s young son is murdered in front of him) can leave an audience with a profound sense of unease. Also important to Yearling s discussion was the immediacy of the theatre: an audience sees violence and conflict enacted before their eyes. In the world outside this would demand an active response, but in the world of the theatre the enforced passivity of spectatorship, Yearling maintained, makes the audience feel like either voyeurs or cowards. Yearling s arguments, therefore, raised an important point about fiction s potential to unsettle its audience or reader through its depiction of conflict or violence. We are not always able to control our responses to a piece of drama or a written text; perhaps the best literature on conflict always makes us uncomfortable in some sense, by revealing, to return to the topic of Zimbler s opening paper, the truths of that conflict. Conference organiser Emily Wingfield, representing EDACS, asked the question in her closing comments, would a conference on literature and harmony have inspired the same amount of discussion? Perhaps, but there is a sense in which all literature is in some way driven by conflict, be it the explicit representation of conflict, or simply on the level of narrative: conflict between the characters in a novel for example. The range of different ways in which papers at the conference explored and interpreted the relationship between the two terms certainly suggests so, revealing new insights on both literature and conflict, and literature as conflict. 173

Acknowledgments The Literature and Conflict conference was the first of what we hope will become an annual postgraduate conference in the English Department at the University of Birmingham. It was made possible by generous funding from the School of English, Drama, American and Canadian Studies, and was organised by Sarah Chatterley, Annie Dickinson, Chloe Morgan, Lucy Rowland and Emily Wingfield. References Adorno, T. W. (1981), Prisms, Weber, S. and S. Weber (trans), Cambridge MA: The MIT Press (originally published in German as Prismen in 1955) Spivak, G. C. (1988), Can the Subaltern Speak?, in Nelson, C. and L. Grossberg (eds), Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture, Chicago: University of Illinois Press, pp. 271-316 White, H. (1978), Tropics of Discourse: Essays in Cultural Criticism, Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press 174