{"title":"Style","authors":"Daniel Hartley","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.1163","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Modern style emerged from the ruins of the premodern “separation of styles” (high, middle, and low). Whereas, previously, only the nobility could be represented in the high style and commoners in the low, modern style harbors a democratic, generic potential: in principle, anyone can write about anything in any way he or she likes. The history of modern style, as a central critical and compositional principle, is thus deeply imbricated with modern democracy and capitalist modernity. It has a unique relationship to the history of realism, which was itself premised upon the demise of the separation of styles. Many critics (e.g., Erich Auerbach, Roland Barthes, and Fredric Jameson) stress the way in which, as a concept and linguistic practice, style connects the body to a generic, Utopian potential of the everyday. Feminist critics, such as Hélène Cixous and Luce Irigaray, have pursued style’s relationship to the body to delineate a specifically feminine mode of writing [écriture féminine]. Marxist critics, such as Raymond Williams, have argued that style should be understood as a linguistic mode of social relationship. The corollary is that social contradictions are experienced by writers as problems of style (e.g., in Thomas Hardy: how to unite the “educated” style of the urban ruling class with the “customary” style of the rural working class into a single artistic whole). Other critics (e.g., Franco Moretti, Roberto Schwarz) have extended this logic to the scale of “world literature:” they identify stylistic discontinuity as a feature of peripheral world literature that seeks to imitate European realist forms; it is caused by a mismatch between prevailing modes of production and dominant ideologies at the core and the (semi-)periphery of the capitalist world-system. Free indirect style, which merges narrator and character into a new, third voice, has been identified as a key feature of prose fiction in the world-systemic core—the symbolic embodiment of modern, bourgeois forms of power (an “impersonal intimacy”). Finally, “late style”—a concept associated with Theodor W. Adorno and Edward W. Said—has become an influential way of characterizing works of artistic maturity written as the author approaches old age and death (though it is certainly not limited to biological maturity). It is a style in which form and subjectivity become torn from one another, the latter freeing itself only then to subtract itself (rather than “express” itself). Style thus hovers between the impersonality of the demos and the grave.","PeriodicalId":207246,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature","volume":"31 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-09-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.1163","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Modern style emerged from the ruins of the premodern “separation of styles” (high, middle, and low). Whereas, previously, only the nobility could be represented in the high style and commoners in the low, modern style harbors a democratic, generic potential: in principle, anyone can write about anything in any way he or she likes. The history of modern style, as a central critical and compositional principle, is thus deeply imbricated with modern democracy and capitalist modernity. It has a unique relationship to the history of realism, which was itself premised upon the demise of the separation of styles. Many critics (e.g., Erich Auerbach, Roland Barthes, and Fredric Jameson) stress the way in which, as a concept and linguistic practice, style connects the body to a generic, Utopian potential of the everyday. Feminist critics, such as Hélène Cixous and Luce Irigaray, have pursued style’s relationship to the body to delineate a specifically feminine mode of writing [écriture féminine]. Marxist critics, such as Raymond Williams, have argued that style should be understood as a linguistic mode of social relationship. The corollary is that social contradictions are experienced by writers as problems of style (e.g., in Thomas Hardy: how to unite the “educated” style of the urban ruling class with the “customary” style of the rural working class into a single artistic whole). Other critics (e.g., Franco Moretti, Roberto Schwarz) have extended this logic to the scale of “world literature:” they identify stylistic discontinuity as a feature of peripheral world literature that seeks to imitate European realist forms; it is caused by a mismatch between prevailing modes of production and dominant ideologies at the core and the (semi-)periphery of the capitalist world-system. Free indirect style, which merges narrator and character into a new, third voice, has been identified as a key feature of prose fiction in the world-systemic core—the symbolic embodiment of modern, bourgeois forms of power (an “impersonal intimacy”). Finally, “late style”—a concept associated with Theodor W. Adorno and Edward W. Said—has become an influential way of characterizing works of artistic maturity written as the author approaches old age and death (though it is certainly not limited to biological maturity). It is a style in which form and subjectivity become torn from one another, the latter freeing itself only then to subtract itself (rather than “express” itself). Style thus hovers between the impersonality of the demos and the grave.
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风格
现代风格是从前现代“风格分离”(高、中、低)的废墟中产生的。在此之前,只有贵族才能用高级文体表达,而平民则用低级文体表达,但现代文体蕴藏着一种民主的、普遍的潜力:原则上,任何人都可以用他或她喜欢的任何方式写任何东西。现代风格的历史,作为一个核心的批评和创作原则,因此与现代民主和资本主义现代性深深交织在一起。它与现实主义的历史有着独特的关系,而现实主义的历史本身就是以风格分离的消亡为前提的。许多批评家(如埃里希·奥尔巴赫、罗兰·巴特和弗雷德里克·詹姆逊)强调,作为一种概念和语言实践,风格将身体与日常生活的一般乌托邦潜能联系起来。女权主义评论家,如hendrix Cixous和Luce Irigaray,追求风格与身体的关系,描绘出一种特别女性化的写作模式。马克思主义批评家,如雷蒙德·威廉姆斯,认为风格应该被理解为一种社会关系的语言模式。其必然结果是,社会矛盾被作家体验为风格问题(例如,在托马斯·哈代:如何将城市统治阶级的“受过教育的”风格与农村工人阶级的“习惯的”风格统一为一个单一的艺术整体)。其他评论家(如弗朗哥·莫雷蒂、罗伯托·施瓦茨)将这一逻辑扩展到“世界文学”的范围:他们认为,文体的不连续性是试图模仿欧洲现实主义形式的外围世界文学的一个特征;它是由资本主义世界体系的核心和(半)外围的主流生产模式和主导意识形态之间的不匹配造成的。自由的间接风格,将叙述者和人物融合成一种新的,第三种声音,被认为是散文小说在世界系统核心中的一个关键特征——现代资产阶级形式的权力的象征性体现(一种“非个人的亲密关系”)。最后,“晚期风格”——一个与西奥多·阿多诺和爱德华·萨义德有关的概念——已经成为一种有影响力的方式来描述作者在接近老年和死亡时所写的艺术成熟作品(尽管它当然不限于生物成熟)。在这种风格中,形式和主观性被彼此撕裂,后者只有在那时才能解放自己,从而减去自己(而不是“表达”自己)。因此,风格徘徊在平民的非人格化和严肃之间。
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