现代主义与贵族:亚当-帕克斯(Adam Parkes)所著的《英国特权的怪物》(评论

IF 0.5 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE STUDIES IN THE NOVEL Pub Date : 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1353/sdn.2024.a921064
Alex Murray
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As Parkes notes in his introduction, this was a period in which the British aristocracy suffered a series of blows which David Cannadine influentially labelled the “unmaking” of the British aristocratic and landed classes: from the agricultural crises of the 1870s through 1890s, the introduction of an estate tax with the Finance Act of 1894, the death of significant numbers of the aristocracy during the First World War, the loss of landholdings in Ireland following the War of Independence, and the erosion of income from overseas estates and investments as the empire crumbled. More broadly, the spread of suffrage, as well as the culture of democracy and the democratization of culture, fundamentally changed British views of class. Parkes’s central thesis is that modernist literature undertook an “imaginative remaking” of the British aristocracy that cannot be grasped simply as critique or celebration, but as a series of moods (3). As Parkes notes, given how pervasive aristocratic culture is in literary modernism, it is striking that it “has been sitting in plain sight for so long that it’s easy to forget it’s there” (15). While there are a great many books on the fascist politics of British and European modernisms (Jameson, Carlston, Hewitt, Frost), and recent work on conservatism (Hadjiyiannis), the aristocratic has been neglected: like all good books, <em>Modernism and the Aristocracy</em> is so essential that it’s almost impossible to understand why it hasn’t been written before.</p> <p>Parkes organizes his study around a “cluster of attitudes, affects, and moods, which operate as tropes” (17). This gives the book a dynamic structure, although at times it can be a little disorienting, with authors appearing in multiple chapters or particularly important authors only getting brief cameos. Chapter One examines the stupidity of aristocracy in D. H. Lawrence and Aldous Huxley (although as the chapter develops Huxley takes center stage). They are, of course, both deeply reactionary and anti-democratic writers, but as Parkes explains, each “hanker[s] after some form of aristocracy, natural and intuitive in Lawrence’s case, rational and intellectual in Huxley’s,” which makes them both trenchant critics of the stupidity of hereditary aristocracy (23). Parkes, drawing on Deleuze, Ronell, and others, distinguishes between the negative stupidity of vapid conversation and convention and the productive stupidity which unsettles shibboleths. Lawrence and <strong>[End Page 110]</strong> Huxley “unsettle the very categories of stupidity and intelligence, collapsing the social and political hierarchicalism with which they are sometimes associated” (28). Ranging widely, at times frenetically, across the novels, essays, and letters of both authors, Parkes offers an impressive anatomization of the ways in which Lawrence and Huxley challenge the pretensions of the aristocratic cliques they encountered at Lady Ottoline Morrell’s Garsington Manor, as well as Lawrence’s celebration of an “aristocracy of touch” (35), and Huxley’s ambivalence as to the possibility of an aristocracy of the intellect.</p> <p>The second chapter focuses on aristocratic boredom in Evelyn Waugh and Elizabeth Bowen. Parkes distinguishes between historical/situational boredom (a product of the conditions of modernity) and profound or existential boredom, arguing that both Waugh and Bowen push “boredom to its limits as an historical category” (71). Parkes’s reading of Bowen’s <em>The Last September</em> (1929) is wonderful, convincingly arguing that Bowen “leaves her privileged characters in a state of suspension, their eminence toppled, their future uncertain in the democratic, middle-class, post-imperial world” (104). Waugh presents a rather murkier picture in that he is scathing about modern aristocracy in <em>A Handful of Dust</em>, but deeply sceptical of the middle-class ‘Age of Hooper’ in <em>Brideshead Revisited</em>. 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More broadly, the spread of suffrage, as well as the culture of democracy and the democratization of culture, fundamentally changed British views of class. Parkes’s central thesis is that modernist literature undertook an “imaginative remaking” of the British aristocracy that cannot be grasped simply as critique or celebration, but as a series of moods (3). As Parkes notes, given how pervasive aristocratic culture is in literary modernism, it is striking that it “has been sitting in plain sight for so long that it’s easy to forget it’s there” (15). While there are a great many books on the fascist politics of British and European modernisms (Jameson, Carlston, Hewitt, Frost), and recent work on conservatism (Hadjiyiannis), the aristocratic has been neglected: like all good books, <em>Modernism and the Aristocracy</em> is so essential that it’s almost impossible to understand why it hasn’t been written before.</p> <p>Parkes organizes his study around a “cluster of attitudes, affects, and moods, which operate as tropes” (17). This gives the book a dynamic structure, although at times it can be a little disorienting, with authors appearing in multiple chapters or particularly important authors only getting brief cameos. Chapter One examines the stupidity of aristocracy in D. H. Lawrence and Aldous Huxley (although as the chapter develops Huxley takes center stage). They are, of course, both deeply reactionary and anti-democratic writers, but as Parkes explains, each “hanker[s] after some form of aristocracy, natural and intuitive in Lawrence’s case, rational and intellectual in Huxley’s,” which makes them both trenchant critics of the stupidity of hereditary aristocracy (23). Parkes, drawing on Deleuze, Ronell, and others, distinguishes between the negative stupidity of vapid conversation and convention and the productive stupidity which unsettles shibboleths. Lawrence and <strong>[End Page 110]</strong> Huxley “unsettle the very categories of stupidity and intelligence, collapsing the social and political hierarchicalism with which they are sometimes associated” (28). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 现代主义与贵族:亚当-帕克斯(Adam Parkes)著,亚历克斯-默里(Alex Murray)译 PARKES, ADAM.Modernism and the Aristocracy:Modernism and the Aristocracy: Monsters of English Privilege.牛津大学出版社,2023 年:牛津大学出版社,2023 年。336 pp.精装版 100.00 美元。亚当-帕克斯(Adam Parkes)撰写了一本关于英国现代主义贵族的权威性巨著。该书显然是数十年学术研究的结晶,在一段时间内仍将是这一主题的定论,也是对现代主义研究的重要贡献。正如帕克斯在序言中指出的,在这一时期,英国贵族阶级遭受了一系列打击,戴维-坎纳丁(David Cannadine)将其称为英国贵族阶级和地主阶级的 "解体":这些打击包括:19 世纪 70 年代到 90 年代的农业危机、1894 年《财政法案》引入遗产税、第一次世界大战期间大量贵族的死亡、独立战争后爱尔兰土地所有权的丧失,以及随着帝国的崩溃,海外地产和投资收入的减少。更广泛地说,选举权的普及以及民主文化和文化民主化从根本上改变了英国人对阶级的看法。帕克斯的中心论点是,现代主义文学对英国贵族进行了 "富有想象力的重塑",这种重塑不能简单地理解为批判或颂扬,而是一系列情绪的重塑(3)。正如 Parkes 所指出的,鉴于贵族文化在现代主义文学中无处不在,令人震惊的是,它 "长期以来一直处于众目睽睽之下,以至于人们很容易忘记它的存在"(15)。虽然有大量关于英国和欧洲现代主义的法西斯政治的书籍(詹姆逊、卡尔斯顿、休伊特、弗罗斯特),以及最近关于保守主义的著作(哈吉亚尼斯),但贵族文化一直被忽视:与所有好书一样,《现代主义与贵族文化》是如此重要,以至于几乎无法理解为什么以前没有人写过它。Parkes 围绕着 "一系列态度、情感和情绪,它们作为主题"(17)来组织他的研究。这使得本书的结构充满活力,不过有时也会让人有些无所适从,因为作者会出现在多个章节中,或者一些特别重要的作者只是简短登场。第一章探讨了 D. H. 劳伦斯和奥尔德斯-赫胥黎(虽然随着章节的发展,赫胥黎占据了中心位置)笔下贵族的愚蠢。当然,他们都是极度反动和反民主的作家,但正如帕克斯所解释的,他们每个人都 "渴望某种形式的贵族制度,劳伦斯的贵族制度是自然和直观的,赫胥黎的贵族制度是理性和知识分子的",这使得他们都对世袭贵族制度的愚蠢进行了尖锐的批评(23)。帕克斯借鉴德勒兹、罗内尔等人的观点,区分了空洞对话和约定俗成的消极愚昧与打破桎梏的生产性愚昧。劳伦斯和赫胥黎 "颠覆了愚蠢和智慧的范畴,瓦解了有时与之相关的社会和政治等级制度"(28)。帕克斯广泛涉猎两位作家的小说、散文和书信,有时甚至是狂热地涉猎,他对劳伦斯和赫胥黎挑战他们在奥托琳-莫雷尔夫人的加辛顿庄园所遇到的贵族小团体的自命不凡的方式进行了深入剖析,并对劳伦斯对 "触觉贵族"(35)的赞美和赫胥黎对智力贵族的可能性的矛盾态度进行了深入剖析,令人印象深刻。第二章的重点是伊夫林-沃(Evelyn Waugh)和伊丽莎白-鲍文(Elizabeth Bowen)的贵族式无聊。Parkes 区分了历史/情境无聊(现代性条件下的产物)和深刻或存在性无聊,认为沃和鲍恩都将 "无聊作为一个历史范畴推向了极限"(71)。Parkes 对鲍恩《最后的九月》(1929 年)的解读非常精彩,他令人信服地指出,鲍恩 "让她笔下的特权人物处于一种悬浮状态,他们的尊贵地位被推翻,他们在民主、中产阶级、后帝国世界中的前途未卜"(104)。沃呈现的是一幅更加模糊的图景,他在《一捧尘埃》中对现代贵族嗤之以鼻,但在《重访布里兹赫德》中却对中产阶级的 "胡珀时代 "深表怀疑。我希望能从帕克斯那里听到更多关于无聊和...
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Modernism and the Aristocracy: Monsters of English Privilege by Adam Parkes (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Modernism and the Aristocracy: Monsters of English Privilege by Adam Parkes
  • Alex Murray
PARKES, ADAM. Modernism and the Aristocracy: Monsters of English Privilege. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023. 336 pp. $100.00 hardcover.

As is perhaps appropriate for the subject at hand, Adam Parkes has written a monumental, authoritative study of aristocracy in British modernism. Evidently the product of many decades of scholarship, it will remain the final word on the topic for some time, and an important contribution to modernist studies more generally. As Parkes notes in his introduction, this was a period in which the British aristocracy suffered a series of blows which David Cannadine influentially labelled the “unmaking” of the British aristocratic and landed classes: from the agricultural crises of the 1870s through 1890s, the introduction of an estate tax with the Finance Act of 1894, the death of significant numbers of the aristocracy during the First World War, the loss of landholdings in Ireland following the War of Independence, and the erosion of income from overseas estates and investments as the empire crumbled. More broadly, the spread of suffrage, as well as the culture of democracy and the democratization of culture, fundamentally changed British views of class. Parkes’s central thesis is that modernist literature undertook an “imaginative remaking” of the British aristocracy that cannot be grasped simply as critique or celebration, but as a series of moods (3). As Parkes notes, given how pervasive aristocratic culture is in literary modernism, it is striking that it “has been sitting in plain sight for so long that it’s easy to forget it’s there” (15). While there are a great many books on the fascist politics of British and European modernisms (Jameson, Carlston, Hewitt, Frost), and recent work on conservatism (Hadjiyiannis), the aristocratic has been neglected: like all good books, Modernism and the Aristocracy is so essential that it’s almost impossible to understand why it hasn’t been written before.

Parkes organizes his study around a “cluster of attitudes, affects, and moods, which operate as tropes” (17). This gives the book a dynamic structure, although at times it can be a little disorienting, with authors appearing in multiple chapters or particularly important authors only getting brief cameos. Chapter One examines the stupidity of aristocracy in D. H. Lawrence and Aldous Huxley (although as the chapter develops Huxley takes center stage). They are, of course, both deeply reactionary and anti-democratic writers, but as Parkes explains, each “hanker[s] after some form of aristocracy, natural and intuitive in Lawrence’s case, rational and intellectual in Huxley’s,” which makes them both trenchant critics of the stupidity of hereditary aristocracy (23). Parkes, drawing on Deleuze, Ronell, and others, distinguishes between the negative stupidity of vapid conversation and convention and the productive stupidity which unsettles shibboleths. Lawrence and [End Page 110] Huxley “unsettle the very categories of stupidity and intelligence, collapsing the social and political hierarchicalism with which they are sometimes associated” (28). Ranging widely, at times frenetically, across the novels, essays, and letters of both authors, Parkes offers an impressive anatomization of the ways in which Lawrence and Huxley challenge the pretensions of the aristocratic cliques they encountered at Lady Ottoline Morrell’s Garsington Manor, as well as Lawrence’s celebration of an “aristocracy of touch” (35), and Huxley’s ambivalence as to the possibility of an aristocracy of the intellect.

The second chapter focuses on aristocratic boredom in Evelyn Waugh and Elizabeth Bowen. Parkes distinguishes between historical/situational boredom (a product of the conditions of modernity) and profound or existential boredom, arguing that both Waugh and Bowen push “boredom to its limits as an historical category” (71). Parkes’s reading of Bowen’s The Last September (1929) is wonderful, convincingly arguing that Bowen “leaves her privileged characters in a state of suspension, their eminence toppled, their future uncertain in the democratic, middle-class, post-imperial world” (104). Waugh presents a rather murkier picture in that he is scathing about modern aristocracy in A Handful of Dust, but deeply sceptical of the middle-class ‘Age of Hooper’ in Brideshead Revisited. I would have liked to have heard a little more from Parkes about boredom and...

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来源期刊
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL LITERATURE-
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期刊介绍: From its inception, Studies in the Novel has been dedicated to building a scholarly community around the world-making potentialities of the novel. Studies in the Novel started as an idea among several members of the English Department of the University of North Texas during the summer of 1965. They determined that there was a need for a journal “devoted to publishing critical and scholarly articles on the novel with no restrictions on either chronology or nationality of the novelists studied.” The founding editor, University of North Texas professor of contemporary literature James W. Lee, envisioned a journal of international scope and influence. Since then, Studies in the Novel has staked its reputation upon publishing incisive scholarship on the canon-forming and cutting-edge novelists that have shaped the genre’s rich history. The journal continues to break new ground by promoting new theoretical approaches, a broader international scope, and an engagement with the contemporary novel as a form of social critique.
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