Thursday, July 2, 2020
Bishop and Moore An Exploration of Magic Realism - Literature Essay Samples
In The Golden Bough, Sir James George Frazer argues that contemporary science, while evolving from magical and religious attempts to understand and control the natural world, eclipses these frameworks[1]. To Frazer ââ¬Å"magicâ⬠in the 20th century ââ¬Å"is a spurious system of natural law as well as a fallacious guide of conduct; it is a false science as well as an abortive art.â⬠[2] Frazer had a significant impact on early modernism, particularly T.S. Eliot who claimed his work ââ¬Å"has influenced our generation profoundlyâ⬠[3]. The poetry of Marianne Moore and Elizabeth Bishop, in its precision and careful description of the natural world, has been characterized as reflective of a supposed modernist obsession with scientific ways of understanding the world. Paradoxically, both poets achieve a ââ¬Å"mysteriousâ⬠, otherworldly effect through their commitment to precision, in Mooreââ¬â¢s writing this manifests itself mainly in an excessive use of defamilia rization, whereas Bishopââ¬â¢s also explores the dreamscape, linked with an existential anxiety. While some critics have looked into Torodovââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëfantasticââ¬â¢ literature and its relation to Moore, and others have examined the surrealist influences of Bishop, none have considered the possibility that their works exhibit qualities that are indicative of ââ¬Ëmagic/al realismââ¬â¢. While the term is often associated with the explicitly fantastical works of Latin American authors such as Garcia Marquez, in its initial iteration ââ¬Å"magic realismâ⬠described ââ¬Å"a way to uncover the mystery hidden in ordinary objects and everyday realityâ⬠[4] ââ¬â a mode that is not confined to a specific time or place. In liberalizing and expanding the definition, critics such as William Spindler have produced a ââ¬Å"typologyâ⬠for the genre. Using Spindlerââ¬â¢s typology, crucially I will argue that in their precision and hyper-realism, Moore and Bi shop repeatedly elicit this ââ¬Å"magicâ⬠effect; rather than being ââ¬Å"false scienceâ⬠, this ââ¬Å"magicâ⬠actually derives from a hyper-realistic, almost scientific analysis of the world. In an interview for the Paris Review, Moore claimed studying science had a profound impact on her art: ââ¬Å"I found the biology courses â⬠¦ exhilarating. I thought, in fact, of studying medicine. Precision, economy of statement, logic employed to ends that are disinterested, drawing and identifying, liberateââ¬âat least have some bearing onââ¬âthe imaginationâ⬠[5]. It is impossible not to identify within Mooreââ¬â¢s works this exhilaration for the scientific, even the inspirations of her poems are treated as if they were academic sources and unlike modernists such as Eliot and Joyce ââ¬â these sources are enclosed within quotation marks and typically referenced in her notes. For example, the poem ââ¬ËSilenceââ¬â¢ is almost entirely structured around the quote of the narratorââ¬â¢s father my father used to sayâ⬠and perhaps appropriately the narratorââ¬â¢s voice is itself marginalized and silenced. Likewise, the poet tries to silence attempts to read her own biography into the poem, as these words cannot be that of Mooreââ¬â¢s own father who died when she was aged 6 months. Indeed, in her notes it is attributed to the father of ââ¬Å"Miss A.M. Homans, Professor Emeritus of Hygiene, Wellesley Collegeâ⬠. In a distortion of the provenance of this citation, the penultimate line ââ¬Å"make my house your innâ⬠, delivered as if it were also by Mr Homan, is attributed to the philosopher Edmund Burke. Despite this fusion of identities, critics such as John Charles Hawley argue ââ¬Å"these irregularities are not troublingâ⬠as ââ¬Å"clearly Mooreââ¬â¢s intention is to create two composite archetypal figures: father and daughter â⬠¦. [the] father figure is built up explicitly out of Mr Homan s and Edmund Burkeâ⬠[6]. While the latter argument may be true, I would dispute that the effect of this is ââ¬Å"not troublingâ⬠. Moore creates a sense of verisimilitude in her use of quotations: there is no reason not to trust the narrator when she says, ââ¬Å"my father used to sayâ⬠. Additionally, the poet uses a logical approach to her argument, an argument which can be summed up through combination of the first and last lines ââ¬â ââ¬Å"my father used to sayâ⬠ââ¬Å"inns are not residencesâ⬠ââ¬âthe main body acts as a series of logical justifications for this view; ââ¬Å"superior men never make long visitsâ⬠; ââ¬Å"they sometimes enjoy solitudeâ⬠. So, when the father, via examination of Mooreââ¬â¢s notes, is revealed to be ââ¬Å"an archetypeâ⬠, the precise, scientific ââ¬Å"indexicalityâ⬠[7] actually has the effect of dislocating the character from a particular time or place. Natalia Cecire sees this dislocation as symptomatic of Mooreââ¬â¢s precision as a whole, arguing that she ââ¬Å"reproduces the overwhelming quality that the techniques of precision are meant to manage, revealing a poetics whose very commitment to knowledge as such lends it a darkly unknowable dimension.â⬠[8] In her devotion to scientific accuracy, paradoxically Moore opens up the possibility of the mysterious through her poetry. Indeed, at times this ââ¬Å"relentless accuracyâ⬠[9] of Mooreââ¬â¢s work has a defamiliarizing effect, particularly in poems which deal with animals and the natural world. For example, ââ¬ËTo a Snailââ¬â¢ includes the line ââ¬Å"the curious phenomenon of your occipital hornâ⬠; the familiar eyes of a snail are rendered unfamiliar through neuroscientific lexis such as ââ¬Å"occipitalâ⬠and the unusual use of ââ¬Å"hornâ⬠. Like in ââ¬ËSilenceââ¬â¢, precision and the value of what is left unspoken is emphasized: ââ¬Å"contractility is a virtue // as m odesty is a virtueâ⬠. A didactic pattern emerges in Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry; the emphasis on ââ¬Å"virtueâ⬠repeated twice in two successive lines in ââ¬ËTo a Snailââ¬â¢ is derived from a close examination of the natural world, which is on the one hand presented as the container of moral teaching and on the other defamiliarized through her precision. The observed virtues act as objective properties within the snail itself ââ¬â the modesty exhibited in the ability to contract at will is an example of ââ¬Å"the principle that is hid // in the absence of feetâ⬠. The same virtues admired within the typically unromantic animal are exhibited throughout Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry. Indeed, she would spend years crafting a single poem, and the final product was achieved through an extensive process of erasure; for example, the appropriately named ââ¬ËPoetryââ¬â¢ was whittled down from 38 lines to 4. Inspired by Poundââ¬â¢s assertion that ââ¬Å"we live in an ag e of scienceâ⬠, and his suggestion that contemporary literature should take a scientific approach to its depiction of the world, Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry is indicative of the clear, precise style of Imagism. But while close description of the snail ââ¬â and the natural world within her poetry as a whole ââ¬â may reveal Mooreââ¬â¢s general and editorial values, it is by no means purely an allegory for these values, as critic Schulze argues ââ¬Å"Mooreââ¬â¢s animals remain animalsâ⬠[10]. The snail acts as an almost literalized metaphor, the suggestion being that through scientific analysis of the natural world itself ââ¬â while producing a mysterious, defamiliarizing effect ââ¬â one can discover objective, applicable moral instructions. Moore, as Bishopââ¬â¢s mentor had a considerable impact on her poetry, as such the younger poet also favors a style that is precise and scientific, indeed in a letter to Moore she writes ââ¬Å"you and I see what others carelessly overlookâ⬠[11]. However, while she does suggest that morality can be observed within the natural world, she appears less convinced than Moore about the human capacity to interact with these values. In ââ¬ËSandpiperââ¬â¢ for example the value of precision is seen within the movement of the ocean: Watching, rather, the spaces of sand between them, where (no detail too small) the Atlantic drains rapidly backwards and downwards The juxtaposition of the enormous with the minuscule within the natural world, shown here through the spaces between grains of sand alongside the Atlantic Ocean which ââ¬â despite its size ââ¬Å"drainsâ⬠into every pore. Bishop through observing the ocean evokes the necessity of precision a value that is emphasi zed as an aside to the reader in parenthesis ââ¬Å"(no detail too small)â⬠. In the final stanza the reader is alienated from the narrative human voice, which inhabits a smug tone in observing the bird searching between the grains of sand ââ¬Å"Poor bird he is obsessed!â⬠. Yet despite the inability of the speaker to understand the motivations of the Sandpiper, the validity of the birdââ¬â¢s search exists regardless: the ââ¬Å"millions of grainsâ⬠of sand are mixed with the luxurious, almost decadent ââ¬Å"quartz grains, rose and amethystâ⬠. As Bishop claimed ââ¬Å"there are morals aplenty in animal lifeâ⬠, and crucially, ââ¬Å"they have to be studied out by devotedly and minutely observing the animalâ⬠; like Moore she holds that morality exists in the animal kingdom, however the ability to appreciate this comes down to being able to observe ââ¬Å"devotedly and minutelyâ⬠. The potential failure to excavate these values from the natural wor ld is an anxiety that reoccurs throughout Bishopââ¬â¢s poetry, as critic Bonnie Costello suggests ââ¬Å"Moore continually attached value to fact, where Bishop attaches yearning, fear, uncertaintyâ⬠[12]. In ââ¬ËThe Armadilloââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"illegal fire balloonsâ⬠appear to be ââ¬Å"rising toward a saintâ⬠from a human perspective, and yet wreak havoc comparable to hellfire to the animal kingdom ââ¬Å"it splattered like an egg of fireâ⬠; ââ¬Å"the ancient owlsââ¬â¢ nest must have burnedâ⬠. Furthermore, the anxiety towards a search for value in the external world descends into crisis in ââ¬ËIn the Waiting Roomââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬â¢. Here Bishopââ¬â¢s precision is defamiliarizing, however unlike Moore this is the result of an existential angst: the narratorââ¬â¢s description of ââ¬Å"shadowy grey kneesâ⬠is a reaction to a perceived lack of values (ââ¬Å"why should I be my aunt, // or me or anyoneâ⬠) resulting from a precise analysis of the world around him/her which occurs after closely observing a National Geographic magazine. This anxiety manifests itself in a dream-like sequence whereby the narrator feels that the waiting room is sliding ââ¬Å"beneath a big black waveâ⬠; veridical perception is called into question and the scientific precision is dismantled, even though this crisis is arguably a consequence of the precision itself. Before examining the magic realist elements of Bishop and Moore, I will first turn to critical responses to the supposed discrepancy between their scientific precision and the mysterious, arguably magical quality of their poems. Firstly, Jeanne Heuving argues that much of Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry is indicative of a 20th century version of Torodovââ¬â¢s fantastic, defined as ââ¬Å"that hesitation experienced by a person [the reader] who knows only the laws of nature, confronting an apparently supernatural eventâ⬠[13][14]. Explicit use of the supernatural does occur occ asionally in Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry. For example, in the early piece ââ¬Å"Diligence Is to Magic as Progress Is to Flightââ¬â¢ she blurs the distinction between language and thing: ââ¬Å"Speed is not in her mind inseparable from carpetsâ⬠. This inseparability is indicative of Torodovââ¬â¢s fantastic; the reader is unable to distinguish between the description of the thoughts of the narrator and the supernatural entity of the ââ¬Å"magic carpetâ⬠. Nevertheless, the mysterious ââ¬Å"darkly unknowable dimensionâ⬠of Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry cannot be restricted to the few poems where she incorporates the supernatural, and Torodovââ¬â¢s fantastic ââ¬â which requires at least the suggestion of the supernatural ââ¬â fails to encompass a poem such as ââ¬ËTo a Snailâ⬠. In contrast, critics have attempted to approach Bishop from a surrealist angle, understandable for a poet who once stated ââ¬Å"Dreams â⬠¦ catch a peripheral vision of whatever it is one can never really see full-face but that seems enormously importantâ⬠; many of her poems read like verbal reconstructions of dreams. For example, ââ¬ËThe Weedââ¬â¢ begins with the impossible, the act of envisaging the sensation of being dead, as Bishop states ââ¬Å"I dreamed that dead, and meditating, // I lay upon a grave, or bedâ⬠. Throughout the poem the vivid imagery of ââ¬Å"the rooted heartâ⬠is constantly related to the psychology of the narrator, whose very thoughts ââ¬â much like the narrator of Mooreââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËDiligence Is to Magic as Progress Is to Flightââ¬â¢ become physical: ââ¬Å"It lifted its head all dripping wet // (with my own thoughts)â⬠. Max Ernst once described how flicking through a catalog was enough to induce a sensory overload in its saturation of images and pictures, likewise ââ¬ËThe Weedââ¬â¢ flicks from one location to the next all the while maintaining the photographic precision characteristic of sur realism. Despite her precision, Bishop presents a landscape foreign to the objects depicted, one where ââ¬Å"her poems contain much of the magic, uncanniness and displacement associated with the works of the surrealistsâ⬠. Nevertheless, Bishopââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"magicâ⬠cannot be confined entirely to the realms of human psychology, as critic Richard Mullen points out ââ¬Å"Her landscapes may well possess qualities of dreamscapes, but simultaneously they are marked by an unusually rich appreciation of the natural worldâ⬠[15]. We cannot forget that unlike the surrealists who argued ââ¬Å"there were no objects only subjectsâ⬠and possessed little interest in the external world outside the interior, psychological life of humans, Bishopââ¬â¢s work is dominated by the presence of the external natural world. Crucially, what Mullen sees as the limitations in reading Bishop as a surrealist poet, perhaps work as a strength for a magic realist analysis of her and Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry. Coined in the 1920s by German artist Franz Roh, the initial movement derived from a fascination with the psychoanalytic concepts of the unconscious. However, unlike the surrealists, magic realism was not interested in depicting the interior mind of humans, rather ââ¬Ëmagicââ¬â¢ lay within the external world itself and could be revealed through precise analysis. In the words of Roh, ââ¬Å"mystery does not descend to the represented world, but rather hides within the world itselfâ⬠[16]. In addition, unlike the fantastic, magic realism in its looser definition is not confined to a play between the supernatural and uncanny, rather through close enough analysis of reality the marvelous and uncanny reveal themselves in the external world. For example, in Bishopââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËThe Fishââ¬â¢ the leakin g of oil ââ¬â a typically unromantic image ââ¬â becomes an object of beauty as the refraction of light transforms it into ââ¬Å"rainbow, rainbow, rainbowâ⬠. The scene is both vivid and hyper-realistic, emphasized through emphatic repetition. Likewise, the presentation of animals as literalized metaphors is indicative of Rohââ¬â¢s conception of magic realism, Mooreââ¬â¢s snail cannot be confined to an allegory for the editorial process morality is self-evident within the animal kingdom and can be revealed through precision. In his analysis of the genre, William Spindler developed a typology of ââ¬Å"metaphysical, anthropological and ontologicalâ⬠magic realism, with the initial category corresponding to Rohââ¬â¢s conception[17]. I would argue that the initial category best corresponds to the work of Bishop and Moore, and here the magic ââ¬Å"is taken in the sense of conjuring, producing surprising effects by the arrangement of natural objects by means o f tricks, devices or optical illusionâ⬠. In Bishopââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËFilling Stationââ¬â¢ the arrangement of cans ââ¬Å"ESSO-SO-SO-SOâ⬠is both intensely realistic but also produces an effect comparable to synaesthesia, as the sibilance of ââ¬Å"soâ⬠gives the inanimate cans an auditory and visual presence, emphasised by ââ¬Å"softly sayâ⬠in the line preceding. Indeed, ââ¬Å"in literature, Metaphysical Magic Realism is found in texts that induce a sense of unreality in the reader by the technique of Verfremdung, by which a familiar scene is described as if it were something new and unknown, but without dealing explicitly with the supernaturalâ⬠[18] ââ¬â in ââ¬ËFilling Stationââ¬â¢ the commonplace petrol station eventually becomes a reminder that ââ¬Å"somebody loves us allâ⬠. Furthermore, Spindler argues that ââ¬Å"the result is often an uncanny atmosphere and the creation â⬠¦ [of a] impersonal presenceâ⬠[19] ââ¬â this imp ersonal presence is idiosyncratic of Mooreââ¬â¢s poetry, as observed in ââ¬ËSilenceââ¬â¢ where the majority of the poem is made entirely of quotations. It is undeniable that in their scientific precision, ironically a sense of magic is evoked comparable to that described by Roh. Ultimately then, while the poetry of both Bishop and Moore can be characterized as adhering to a scientific approach to literature in its precision, their devotion to this practice uncovers an underlying mysteriousness in their works. In Moore this is a result of a sense of dislocation given by her playfulness with scientific and logical modes of thinking such as through use of poetic citation, and in Bishop an anxiety towards a failure to uncover values within the external world manifests itself in dreamlike imagery. To explain this mysteriousness some critics have appeals to fantastic or surrealist influences. In contrast, I would argue that magic realism ââ¬â in its early conception ââ¬â corresponds to Bishop and Mooreââ¬â¢s mode of writing, illustrative of a modern magical thought where rather than being opposed to scientific approaches to the world, the ââ¬Ëmagicââ¬â¢ is uncovered through the precision of such approaches. Endnotes and Reference List: [1] Frazer, James George. The Golden Bough Palgrave Macmillan, London, 1990.[2] Ibid[3] Dwivedi, Amar Nath. TS Eliot: A Critical Study. Atlantic Publishers Dist, 2003.[4] Bowers, Maggie Ann. Magic (al) realism. Routledge, 2013. [5] Hall, Donald. The Art of Poetry IV: Marianne Moore. Paris Review 7 (1961): 41-66. [6] Hawley, John Charles, ed. Reform and counterreform: dialectics of the Word in Western Christianity since Luther. No. 34. Walter de Gruyter, 1994. [7] Cecire, Natalia. Marianne Moores Precision. Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory 67, no. 4 (2011): 83-110. [8] Ibid [9] Ibid [10] Schulze, Robin G. The Web of Friendship: Marianne Moore and Wallace Stevens. University of Michigan Press, 1995. [11] Ibid [12] Costello, Bonnie. Marianne Moore and Elizabeth Bishop: Friendship and Influence. Twentieth Century Literature 30, no. 2/3 (1984): 130-149. [13] Heuving, Jeanne. Omissions Are Not Accidents: Gender in the Art of Marianne Moore. Wayne St ate University Press, 1992. [14] Todorov, Tzvetan. The fantastic: A structural approach to a literary genre. Cornell University Press, 1975. [15] Mullen, Richard. Elizabeth Bishops Surrealist Inheritance. American Literature 54, no. 1 (1982): 63-80 [16] Roh, Franz. Magic realism: post-expressionism. Magical Realism: Theory, History, Community (1995): 15-31. [17] Spindler, William. Magic realism: a typology. In Forum for modern language studies, vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 75-85. Oxford University Press, 1993. [18] Ibid [19] Ibid
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