to react to the events around her. This is not to argue, though, that the modality of
the novel as a whole is neutrally shaded nor indeed that this character’s perceptions
of the world are always relayed in this way. It is very much in the idiom of the ‘post-
modern’ novel, of which
Beloved
is a preeminent example, that it tangles up different
domains of discourse and allows its characters to migrate
between different text
worlds (McHale 1987). To my mind, variable narrative focalisation is just one of the
reflexes of the post-modernist ‘style’, such as it is, where the oscillations in point of
view give rise to many alternating viewing positions and modalities.
Looking at how patterns in point of view mark out not just the postmodern novel
but other genres of narrative fiction would make for a useful future study. Another
would be to see if additional modal frameworks could be developed, beyond the three
proposed in this unit, which could more subtly delineate types of writing style. Some
more general issues to do with narrative viewpoint are raised in Mick Short’s reading,
D5, which ‘doubles up’ as a useful reading for this thread.
A WORKSHOP ON SPEECH AND THOUGHT
PRESENTATION
This workshop programme is designed to encourage you to use your stylistic analyses
in tandem with your affective responses to literary texts
and to enable you to chal-
lenge and (re)evaluate some of the literary critical commentaries that have been
written on the texts you are studying. Before moving onto the more practical aspects
of the programme, it is worth introducing here the short
passage that will form
the nucleus of the workshop activity. It is taken from American writer Ernest
Hemingway’s short novel (or novella)
The Old Man and the Sea
(see also unit B1).
The intention will ultimately be to place this passage against
a series of literary-
critical comments about the novella and then to use an analysis of speech and thought
presentation as a way of reappraising these critical comments and of reaching more
systematic interpretations about Hemingway’s narrative technique.
The passage itself is taken from the lengthy central section of the story which
covers the time the old man spends at sea during his struggle with the huge marlin
that he has hooked. This particular episode occurs early in the morning of the second
day of his battle with the fish (thus explaining the references in the text to ‘the line’
slanting into the water). He is confronted with two practical problems: eating the
small tuna that he caught the day before and solving the problem of his cramped left
hand. The passage is quite neatly rounded in that it stretches
from the preparatory
stages to the completion of the old man’s meal. To facilitate subsequent referencing
to the passage, lines have been numbered and paragraph boundaries have been
double-spaced. Read the passage now. Don’t worry
about locating any stylistic
features in the passage at this stage and don’t feel you that are being asked to make
any kind of interpretative judgment about the text.
130
E X P L O R A T I O N
C8
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