{"title":"The Study of American Literary Naturalism: A Personal Retrospective","authors":"D. Pizer","doi":"10.22455/2541-7894-2021-11-424-436","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Donald Pizer’s personal retrospective also embraces history of American literary naturalism studies from the early1950s up to nowadays. From his earliest seminar in American literature D. Pizer was deeply drawn to the writers of the 1890s. As a student he was assured by the standard historical and critical studies of the period that naturalists had failed in this effort to apply a scientific accuracy and detachment to fictional representation, their novels were therefore both untrue and inept and naturalism was in effect a regrettable false step in the \"development\" of American literature. Since the 1960s being engaged in close study of the early naturalists — Norris, Crane, Garland, Dreiser — Pizer had to confront these conventional attitudes. When looked at closely as a fictional representation of beliefs about human nature and experience, the naturalistic novel appeared to be far more complex than it was believed to be. Pizer sought in a series of books and essays to describe and thus to redefine American naturalism as a whole. Rather than a mindless adoption and crude dramatization of deterministic formulas, he found in naturalistic fiction the conflict between old values and new experience, which usually resulted in a vital thematic ambivalence. It was this very ambivalence, rather than the certainties of the convinced determinist, which was the source of the fictional strength of the naturalistic novel of the period. There has been much recent interest in the American naturalist movement and its texts. It seems, as long as American writers respond deeply to the disparity between the ideal and the actual in our national experience, naturalism will remain one of the major means for the registering of this shock of discovery.","PeriodicalId":34458,"journal":{"name":"Literatura dvukh Amerik","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Literatura dvukh Amerik","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22455/2541-7894-2021-11-424-436","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Donald Pizer’s personal retrospective also embraces history of American literary naturalism studies from the early1950s up to nowadays. From his earliest seminar in American literature D. Pizer was deeply drawn to the writers of the 1890s. As a student he was assured by the standard historical and critical studies of the period that naturalists had failed in this effort to apply a scientific accuracy and detachment to fictional representation, their novels were therefore both untrue and inept and naturalism was in effect a regrettable false step in the "development" of American literature. Since the 1960s being engaged in close study of the early naturalists — Norris, Crane, Garland, Dreiser — Pizer had to confront these conventional attitudes. When looked at closely as a fictional representation of beliefs about human nature and experience, the naturalistic novel appeared to be far more complex than it was believed to be. Pizer sought in a series of books and essays to describe and thus to redefine American naturalism as a whole. Rather than a mindless adoption and crude dramatization of deterministic formulas, he found in naturalistic fiction the conflict between old values and new experience, which usually resulted in a vital thematic ambivalence. It was this very ambivalence, rather than the certainties of the convinced determinist, which was the source of the fictional strength of the naturalistic novel of the period. There has been much recent interest in the American naturalist movement and its texts. It seems, as long as American writers respond deeply to the disparity between the ideal and the actual in our national experience, naturalism will remain one of the major means for the registering of this shock of discovery.
Donald Pizer的个人回顾展也涵盖了从20世纪50年代早期到现在的美国文学自然主义研究的历史。从他最早的美国文学研讨会开始,D. Pizer就深深地被19世纪90年代的作家所吸引。作为一名学生,那个时期的标准历史和批判研究让他确信,自然主义者未能将科学的准确性和超然性应用于虚构的表现,因此,他们的小说既不真实又拙劣,自然主义实际上是美国文学“发展”中令人遗憾的错误一步。自20世纪60年代以来,由于对诺里斯、克兰、加兰、德莱塞等早期博物学家进行了深入研究,皮塞不得不面对这些传统观念。当我们把自然主义小说看作是对人类本性和经历的虚构表现时,自然主义小说似乎比人们认为的要复杂得多。Pizer试图通过一系列的书籍和文章来描述并重新定义美国的自然主义。他在自然主义小说中发现了旧价值观和新经验之间的冲突,而不是盲目地采用和粗暴地戏剧化决定论的公式,这通常会导致重要的主题矛盾。正是这种矛盾心理,而不是坚定的决定论者的确定性,是那个时期自然主义小说虚构力量的源泉。最近,人们对美国自然主义运动及其文本产生了浓厚的兴趣。看来,只要美国作家对我们国家经验中理想与现实之间的差距作出深刻的反应,自然主义就仍将是记录这一惊人发现的主要手段之一。