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Constructing the Modern Novel

Nov 07, 2015

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Benjamin Boyce

"Literature’s progress has always come from between words, between sings & signifiers, from between statements and actions, between characters, between dramas, between epics—as though fiction were a fabric that clothes one thing in order to undress another."
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    The Modern Innovation

    Situating the Novel in the Progression of Semantic Meaning

    Benjamin Boyce, June 2, 2015

    1. A New Fiction?

    The modern novel, as it arose in 18th century England, is usually described as an

    innovation over the medieval romance and the epic. Ian Watt ascribes to this new form

    the qualities of individuality, empiricism, and uniqueness. These qualities were tied to

    similar innovations in other realms of culture, such as science and philosophy, and were

    rooted in

    that vast transformation of Western civilization since the Renaissance which has replaced the unified world picture of the Middle Ages with another very different oneone which presents us, essentially, with a developing but unplanned aggregate of particular individuals having particular experiences at particular times and at particular places.1

    If the modern novel was an innovation on the romance and the epic, then how was

    fiction itself modified to accommodate this particularity of experience, individuality, and

    context?

    I will be looking at literature as an act of constructing virtualized experience which

    proceeds from a special use of language. My model proceeds from the sentence to the

    modern novel, seeking to show the basic units of fiction, and how these units are used to

    form statements of increasing subtlety and complexity.

    1 Watt, Ian. The Rise of the Novel; Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding. Berkeley: U of California, 1957. Page 31.

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    2. In the Word was the Beginning

    In Interpretation Theory2, Paul Ricoeur writes that semiotics, the science of signs,

    proceeds from the separation of language from its use in discourse in order to study the

    linguistic code which gives a specific structure to each of the linguistic systems, which

    we know as the various languages spoken by different linguistic communities.3 However,

    Ricoeur argues, language as a system of signs has only a virtual existence. What emerges

    in actuality is the speech act, to which Ricoeur assigns an existential function as the

    bearer of a meaning that transcends the isolation of the speaker from the listener, and

    vice-versa.4

    Through discourse, my experience is translated into meaning, which is carried to you

    on the code of language; then you as my listener decode my meaning from our language,

    and are then able to incorporate my meaning into your experience. The language we

    share is anonymous; our statements, forged out of language, are non-anonymous

    instantiations of our linguistic code.

    It is this leap from semiotics to semantics (from the self-sufficient meaning of signs

    to the inter-subjective meaning of statements) that is the signature leap of the meaning-

    making impulse that results in literature (among other forms of discourse). Semantics still

    possesses a virtual existence, but its virtuality is substantiated by the meaning that a

    speaker is conveying, by their particular and momentary manner of grammaticizing their

    state and their intention.

    Insofar as the context of a statement is a conversation, the particular conversation

    establishes the rules by which we can extract the intended meaning from the statements

    within it. One needs to know how to take a statement before they can proceed to

    interpret it: is it serious, or a joke? Is it a clarification or obfuscation? Is it a riddle to be 2 Paul Ricoeur, Interpretation Theory: Discourse and the Surplus of Meaning, Fort Worth, Texas, Texas Christian University Press, 1973 3 Ricoeur, 1973, page 2 4 Mikhail Bakhtin pushes things a bit further: Discourse lives, as it were, beyond itself, in a living impulse toward the object; if we detach ourselves completely from this impulse all we have left is the naked corpse of the word, from which we can learn nothing at all about the social situation or the fate of a given word in life. To study the word as such, ignoring the impulse that reaches out beyond it, is just as senseless as to study psychological experience outside the context of that real life toward which it was directed and by which it was determined. M Bakhtin Discourse in the Novel, page 292; quote found in Morson, Gary Saul, and Caryl Emerson. Mikhail Bakhtin: Creation of a Prosaics. Stanford, CA: Stanford U, 1990. Page 58.

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    pondered or a solution to be applied?

    It is in the stacking of statements that discourse proceeds; and proceeds to convey a

    higher form of meaning, by using statements as the semiotic units which provide a higher

    field of semantic conveyance. And though it might be conceivable to abstract all the

    various sorts of conversations in order to study how statements may or may not form a

    self-referent system of statement-level meaning similar to that of the semiotic code, even

    pursuing one form of statement (such as the metaphor) is a daunting enough task. And yet,

    by discussing types statements, we might be able to ascertain the generic manner in

    which statements manipulate meaning. Gary Saul Morson distinguishes between two

    types of statements, the aphorism and the dictum, thus:

    The rhetoric of the dictum tends to totality The dictum is certain [it] demands we attend to it An aphorism, by contrast, seems to be found in hiding [With the dictum] everything is present in the statement. It is complete and the author, who is in full control of significance, knows exactly what it means. We can develop it, apply it, take it as the key to many things, but we do not go beyond it The dictum is a conclusion, the aphorism is a beginning. Part of the whole is missing, as is always the case with truth itself The dictum says Something. The Aphorism says Something Else.5

    Using this dichotomy as a starting point for the procedure of the statement, we might

    say that the two generic modes in which statements manipulate meaning is by 1)

    contracting it toward definite units of sense, or 2) dilating meaning to produce a leap or

    reaching-outward of significance.

    Taken to the extreme, the most contracting statements belong to formal logic and

    legal codes (which establish rigorous values and then make inferences or set precedents

    according to these values); whilst the most dilating statements perhaps belong to humor

    or to poetry. A logical statement can be infinitely extended through critical analysis, as in

    the case of Albert North Whitehead and Bertrand Russells Principia Mathematica6

    which sought to establish the logical foundations on which all mathematical statements

    could be provedit subsequently took them 379 pages to establish that one plus one does

    5 Morson, Gary Saul. "The Aphorism: Fragments from the Breakdown of Reason." New Literary History 34.3 (2003): page 420-422 & 428. 6 Whitehead, Alfred North, and Bertrand Russell. Principia Mathematica. Cambridge: UP, 1925.

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    in fact equal two.7 This proof doesnt alter the meaning of 1+1=2, but only extends it

    into the system of which it is a part (being arithmetic); however, when we engage with a

    poetic statementJoys impregnate. Sorrows bring forth.8we proceed to its sense by

    allowing the non-logical tensions in the statement to not cancel one another out, but

    rather form associative connections that we walk, toward an understanding that is

    tentative.9 We must guess what Wm. Blake means to make sense of his statement; we

    must agree that 1+1=2 in order to make sense of that formula.10 The sense-difference

    between these two statements might be defined by orders of ambiguity, but we propose

    that in the conversation of fiction, ambiguity is employed to convey the non-anonymity

    of a specific subject who, in producing unspecific sense, exerts themselves more

    personally into the semantic field.

    However ambiguous or non-anonymous a statement is, its sense is nevertheless

    constrained to a single point or point of view, be that view/point a dilation or contraction

    of meaning. For subjectivity to be extended, it is required that there be room to express

    the dynamics of how and why meaning is being manipulated in a non-anonymous and

    ambiguous manner, which requires a series of statements to establish something of a

    psychic fingerprint. In fiction (being a virtually non-anonymous instance of discourse)

    the semanticization of a series of statements is purposed toward conveying a virtualized

    7 In 1931, Gdel's incompleteness theorem proved that any formal system will never be able to prove its own completeness; either the system will be found to be inconsistent, or there will be some truth which will not be able to be deduced from this system. Alternately, the more earnestly I attempt to explain the humor of the statement A Freudian slip is when I say one thing but **** my mother, the less humor is retained by the phrasegiving rise to the question of the relation between the dilating statement (such as witticisms and metaphor) and the contracting mode of rational explanation. 8 William Blake, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, plate 8. 9 As concerns the procedures for validation by which we test our guesses they are closer to a logic of probability than to a logic of empirical verification. To show that an interpretation is more probable in the light of what we know is something other than showing that a conclusion is true. So in the relevant sense, validation is not verification. It is an argumentative discipline comparable to the juridical procedures used in legal interpretation, a logic of uncertainty and of qualitative probability. Ricoeur, pp. 78. 10 In descriptive writing you have to be careful of associative language. Youll find that analogy, or likeness to something else, is very tricky to handle in description, because the differences are as important as the resemblances. As for metaphor, where youre really saying this is that, youre turning your back on logic and reason completely, because logically two things can never be the same thing and still remain two things. The poet, however, uses these two crude, primitive, archaic forms of thought in the most uninhibited way, because his job is not to describe nature, but to show you a world completely absorbed by the human mind. Frye, Northrop. The Educated Imagination, Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1964. Page 32.

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    subject encountering virtualized experience. The emergence of the virtually experiencing

    subject occurs in the literary forms that are about the length of a page: being the poem

    and the parable.

    On the level of the page, a subject is presented from two directions: from an interior

    and from an exterior point of view. For the interior viewpoint we will ascribe the form of

    the poem; for the exterior viewpoint we will ascribe the form of the parable.

    A poem produces sense on the most sensual level of language (its sounds and

    imagery); and combining a deliberate use of language with a deliberate arrangement of

    statements works to produce the exteriorization of an internal state, which is commonly

    referred to as a voice. The poetic form of a haiku, being so tightly controlled, affords very

    little variability for the voice to acquire subjectivity. But already, on the level of the lyric

    or the sonnet, we are able to hear the voice as a particular instance of subjective

    experience.

    The second principal unit of fiction is the parablenot in the sense of a story with a

    specific meaning, but simply a parabola of happeninga sequence of and thens. The

    parable sits opposite the poem in that it describes a series of happening which shapes the

    virtual subject in action and in a context. The subject of a parable is dissociated from the

    teller (in time by speaking of what happened to me, or in body by speaking of what

    happened to him). The subject is spoken about rather than through, as is the case with a

    poem. Both the poem and the parable present us with an experiencing subject in time, but

    the poem is psychological, as the parable is causal.11 When these two forms are bound

    together by a name that there is the erection of the next semantic field in fiction, being the

    drama.

    By setting a poetic subject on a parabolic arc and allowing that subjects voice to

    respond to its changing situation, what is formed over the course of events is character;

    characters then become the semiotic units being arranged to form statements within a

    dramatic field. 11 Behind proverbs and aphorisms and psychological speculation and religious ritual lies the memory of human experience strung out in time and subject to narrative treatment. Lyric poetry implies a series of events in which the voice in the lyric is embedded or to which it is related. All of this is to say that knowledge and discourse come out of human experience and that the elemental way to process human experience verbally is to give an account of it more or less as it really comes into being and it exists, embedded in the flow of time. Developing a story line is a way of dealing with this flow. Walter Ong, Orality and Literacy, London, Routledge, 1988. Page 140

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    The emergence of character as the semiotic unit of the semanticizing drama has wide

    ranging effects, for here we see the encoding of social relations into the fictional realm.

    The semantic field that arises in the drama is the social strata; dramas statement is one

    of relationships being united or separated. Here, we need to differentiate between the

    point of a specific drama, and the field of its meaning. A dramas point can be tragic

    or comedic, moral or satiric, climactic or anti-climactic, but the field of meaning which a

    drama virtualizes in the realm of language is the constellation of characters into dynamic

    relationships. In drama, humans are able to encode their understanding of how society

    works and how the world works. And though anthropomorphism can have pejorative

    connotations (as a nave form of understanding), within literature, anthropomorphism is

    the imbuing of personhood onto non-personal subjects, and is an empathetic move. It lifts

    the material, vegetal and animal kingdoms into a direct semantic relationship with

    ourselves, allowing us to feel for (to relate on a personal level to) that which doesnt

    have the same type or complexity of feelingand this is enabled by the relationality

    inherent in the dramatic-semantic form.

    It is quite possible to abstract drama from its use, in order to analyze its various

    formsleading us to a certain number of character types and plots.12 Approaching

    drama in this way will provide us with a grab-bag of material from which all stories can

    be reduced or from which assembled. However, to grapple with the semantic meaning of

    drama, to get a handle on the ever escalating field of meaning which literature is

    virtualizing, we must again turn toward use, in order to gauge the effect that drama has on

    meaning.

    The manner of dramas use can be stretched upon a dichotomy between formal and

    informal. At its most formal, drama becomes ritual; at its most informal it becomes a

    folktale, an entertainment. 12 The website www.ipl.org provides various lists of plots, ranging from Foster-Harriss singular all plots are based on conflict; with the extension into plots with 1) a happy ending, 2) an unhappy ending, or 3) the literary plot, in which the critical event takes place at the beginning rather than the end; from there, ipl.org lists the 7 basic plots (all having to do with various forms of conflict); then Ronald Tobias twenty basic plots (ranging from Quest to Love to Discovery, Sacrifice, Rivalry, The Riddle, and so on); and lastly Georges Polti's Tirty-Six Dramatic Situations. ["The "Basic" Plots in Literature." Frequently Asked Reference Questions. N.p., n.d. Web. 30 May 2015, http://www.ipl.org/div/farq/plotFARQ.html]

    As for character types, theres the Protagonist and Antagonist, the Confidante, the Dynamic/Flat/Foil Characters, and so on. We might also go into the archetypal characters, or the various sorts of caricatures that recur in all sorts of fiction (the trickster, the virgin, etc., etc.).

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    As ritual, the enactment of a drama ties the subject through personal experience to his

    immediate social unit. Rites of passage are dramatic forms in which a person is fit into a

    certain role in the larger drama of clan life. The ritual drama identifies its practitioners as

    semiotic units, which it articulates into a larger semantic whole, being the social-unit of

    the tribe. The ritual drama thus defines the tribe through the relationships it establishes of

    the individual units in the tribe, which allows for its members to think of other members

    as necessary for personal meaning. In a sense, to lose a member of ones tribe would be

    like losing a word, were you all a sentence. We see then how a formal dramathat is, a

    drama that is taken very seriouslyacts as a higher order working of the same dynamics

    that are happening at the basic level of language, where it emerges within discourse.

    On the other hand, the informal dramas, those that are not to be taken too literally,

    also perform an important function, as the narrative pastime, the storytelling

    entertainment, is the digesting aloud, as it were, experiences which have been inspired by

    life in the world. Additionally, a good storyteller is able to convey very useful

    information while still carrying her audiences attention alongindeed, the narrative

    process13 is perhaps the most efficient means of passing information from one person to

    the next.

    To recap: we put words together to make statements. We put statements together to

    make poems and parables. We put poems and parables together to form characters, and

    put characters together make dramas. And then what? Well, and then we have a whole

    bunch of dramainvolving a steadily increasing set of characters who are being steadily

    rounded out and events that are extrapolated both forward and backward in time. This

    dramatic sprawl has an urban analogue to it, as different versions of stories, different

    causal chains, different origins and outcomes come into contact with eachother and in

    their contradiction push the reader out of their emersion in the dramatic field.

    All this while, as stories have been progressing from the statement, upward, the

    authority of the author has been at work creating these semantic unities, and at the

    threshold of the many dramas the author is called to expand their authority over a host 13 Process in the sense of processing, for literature is not simply representing the world, but rather replicating the datum found in the world and recasting this datum into its own ontological sphere. This processing we assert is so indicative to fiction that we as readers often overlook it, even as everything that fiction accomplishes it accomplishes through this process of virtualizationof abstracting the world into language, and then forming through language a virtual world that is merely based on (and not strictly in) the world we think of as real.

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    of dramatic units. There must be a mayor, or war-chief, or judge who organizes the

    many-dramas, in order that the audience will not be jarred out of their inclusion in the

    story. Furthermore, there tends to be a critical mass of dramas, which provides a prompt

    for a singular poet to unify them into a broad, monoglossic statementwhich is

    traditionally named the Epic.

    If the semiotic units of the epic are dramas, then the semantic statement of the Epic

    Poet is on the level of an Empire. In the case of Homer, we have a poetic voice which is

    encoded on the level of the statement (by way of hexameter verse and recurrent epithets

    which support the meter), through the subjective position of the actors (described as the

    heroic tradition, but also including the mythic or divine actors), and unified by a grand

    narrative parabola (the fall of Troy, Odysseus journey). On the Epic-semantic field is

    rendered the cultural identity of the Greeks as a whole. And whether or not Homer was

    historically real, it is the unifying authority of the Illiad and the Odyssey that is of such

    force that it requires us to ascribe it to a singular poet. Inversely, this poetic authority not

    only unifies drama, but it unifies a people, and the power of an epic is such that it is

    capable of turning the artists who interact with it into vehicles of its semanticizing force.

    The Ancient Greek poet, sculptor, painter, etc., found in the Epics a unified vision in

    which their entire output could be placed. The Epic becomes a tradition through which

    the identity of the artist interacts with the greater identity of his people. The Epic is the

    arena where the semantic project of literature speaks an entire culture.

    Epics themselves can be arranged on a spectrum similar to that of dramaby

    evaluating their use, or interpretation. Whereas a drama becomes ritual when taken very

    seriously, an Epic becomes scripture, and the same way in which a ritual semanticizes its

    participants into a social statement the scriptural Epic semanticizes its adherents into a

    greater meaning-making unit. A religion such as Christianity, through the writings of St.

    Paul, very explicitly ties its adherents to the drama (the Passion) of Christ, so that

    metaphoricallyand yet somehow compellingly literallya Christian is considered a

    part of the body of Christ, or a part of the body of the Bride of Christ. The Christian Bible

    is an epic that, when internalized as scripture, converts its adherents into extensions of its

    semanticizing force, calling them to read into their life the working-out of the Biblical

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    drama, as well as calling on them to convert others into this semantic structure.14

    Taking such epics too seriously is, in modern times, frowned upon,15 and yet one

    could argue that human beings use these grand narrative structures to at once make sense

    of the world and to fashion a ground with which they may connect and feel at home with

    other humans. Additionally, by touching on religion within this essay on fiction, it is not

    to be concluded that the truth statements of religion are inherently fictitious; only that the

    way in which religions are built is similarif not identicalto the way in which we

    build narratives of less serious or more informal use.

    To return to history (to move toward the modern novel), the prosaic literary forms of 17th

    and 18th century Europe had achieved a stabilization (perhaps stagnation) in the form of

    the romance. The romance being an idealized drama which concerned either the nobility

    14 Eric Auerbach details the particular effectiveness of the New Testament in drawing the individual into its semantic structure: What we witness is the awakening of a new heart and a new spirit. All this applies not only to Peters denial but also to every other occurrence which is related in the New Testament. Every one of them is concerned with the same question, the same conflict with which every human being is basically confronted and which therefore remains infinite and eternally pending. It sets mans whole world astirwhereas the entanglements of fate and passion which Greco-Roman antiquity knows, always directly concern simply the individual, the one person involved in them. It is only by virtue of the most general relations, that is, by virtue of the fact that we too are human beings and thus are subject to fate and passion, that we experience fear and pity. But Peter and the other characters in the New Testament are caught in a universal movement of the depths which at first remains almost entirely below the surface and only very graduallythe Acts of the Apostles show the beginnings of this developmentemerges into the foreground of history, but which even now, from the beginning, lays claim to being limitless and the direct concern of everybody, and which absorbs all merely personal conflicts into itself. Auerbach, Erich. Fortuna. Approaches to the Novel. Ed. Robert Scholes San Francisco: Chandler Publishing Co. 1961. Page 66. 15 Catherine Gallagher argues that it is precisely the modern capacity for provisional belief that gives rise to the novels particular degree of fictionality: Modernity is fiction-friendly because it encourages disbelief, speculation, and credit. The early novels thematic emphases on gullibility, innocence deceived, rash promises extracted, and impetuous emotional and financial investments of all kinds point to the habit of mind it discourages: faith. The reckless wholeheartedness of its heroes and heroines, their guileless vulnerability, solicits our affectionate concern and thereby activates our skepticism on their behalf. Hence, while sympathizing with innocent credulity, the reader is trained in an attitude of disbelief, which is flattered as superior discernment Disbelief is thus the condition of fictionality, prompting judgments not about the storys reality, but about its believability, its plausibility. One is dissuaded from believing the literal truth of a representation so that one can instead admire its likelihood and extend enough credit to buy into the game. Such flexible mental states were the sine qua non of modern subjectivity. Gallagher, Catherine. The Rise of Fictionality. The Novel. Ed. Franco Moretti. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006. Page 345.

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    (e.g. the Arthurian romances) or the peasantry (e.g. the picaresque). The romance was a

    working out of the medieval epic, having to do with love and honor or their opposites,16

    and while the aesthetic quality may have had its low points or high points just as any

    rendition of previous epics in other times and other cultures, I propose that with the

    printing-press the ease of its production and reproduction is the main distinction between

    the romance and the epic, and not any inherent semantic differencethat is, the romance

    is not a semanticizing of the epic, nor a new manner of semanticizing dramait is the

    extension of a certain epic frame, belonging to a Medieval value system (both ethic and

    aesthetic). The romance doesnt do anything new, it just does more or less what the

    Arthurian and Catholic grand stories were doing for the preceding centuries. With Don

    Quixote we have a critique of the romance; showing how much the romance is no longer

    relevant in the post-Enlightenment and post-Renaissance reality. And it is with Robinson

    Crusoe that we have a new semantic form; a new way of semanticizing within the

    narrative field, but Robinson Crusoe isnt following the exponential ordering that the epic

    performs of the drama, and the drama performs of its characters, and characters do of

    their situations and emotions, through poems and parables made of statements made of

    words. Robinson Crusoe does not necessarily make a greater parabolic arc through which

    it treats a number of epics as semiotic units, but rather it emerges within an Intra-Epic

    field, where many Epics are vying for authority over the subject.

    If a novel is a development in literature, then this model would indicate that the novel

    is the semantic form which uses a variety of epics as its semiotic units. And yet a

    semantic unity of a number of these massive units would collapse under the tensions

    between the various authorities which semanticize the various epics, as well as the

    massive amount of cultural data within any given number of epics. So that the modern

    development in literature must be located in a container which will not reduce the epics

    16 Krueger (the Cambridge Companion, 5) has noted rightly that For an elite minority, romances were a vehicle for the construction of a social codechivalryand a mode of sentimental refinementwhich some have called courtly loveby which noble audiences defined their social identities and justifified their privileges, thus reinforcing gender and class distinctions. It is also true that there is an essential connection between chivalrous endeavors and love, but romance during this period is ever aware of the contradiction, or at least, of the otherness between this model and the religious model and the resulting tragedy. The world of romance is a frightful nightmare enclosed in a beautiful dream. Vavaro, Alberto. Medieval French Romance. The Novel. Ed. Franco Moretti. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006. Page 160

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    complexity or neutralize their conflicting authorities. This container must be the ground

    through which these various epics interact, or, the interaction between these various epics

    allows for the establishment of a ground for the expression of navigating them.

    This ground, this container, is the modern subject, who is found between several

    semanticizing epics: the church and the state, Nature and Culture, and so on. Each of

    these epics (or ideologies, or corporations, etc.) are unified in and of themselves by a

    singular authority which the subject is forced to balance with other authorities.17 Render

    unto Caesar now not only applies to the distinction between the state and God, but as

    well various different literary and religious systems. In order for the modern man to stand

    outside any given epic (which he is compelled to do, being a modern man), he must

    locate the authority to evaluate the value of his behavior and experience within himself,

    as an agent who agrees some with these systems, and not so much with those. The

    modern man, to realize his potential, must claim the role of Epic Poet, Prophet, and Priest

    for himself; and the grand parabolic arc need only be his life, and the meter and rhyme of

    his writ need only be his own thoughts, which through rigorous honesty creates a

    document that resonates at the same ontological frequency of other modern personsthat

    is, the modern authors project is to project authority through a subject who is very

    similarly verisimilar to the modern readership; conserving the energy which would

    otherwise be absorbed by the highly formal poetic interface (i.e. hexameter verse), and

    freeing the subject to relate directly of his experience. This directness, with a loss of

    aesthetic refinement18, affords a rendering of the world and the subject into fiction that is

    17 The early novel concentrates not on true extremes (the unique or near unique) but rather on people who slip beyond the norm and test the social fabric But even when acts are horrible or characters heinous, the novel finds ways to comprehend them without violating our sense that we are reading about recognizable people in a world we know The novels willingnessindeed, incessant needto invade traditional areas of privacyand explore matters traditionally considered too personal to be shared, leads to an entirely new understanding of the relationship between public and private, a moving beyond, even, the ordinary reaches of personal conversation and private discourse. Hunter, J. Paul. Before Novels. New York: W.W.Norton, 1990. Page 37. 18 Watt speaks of the necessary directness of the novels use of language thus: On the one hand, Defoe and Richardson make an uncompromising application of the realist point of view in language and prose structure, and thereby forfeit other literary values. On the other hand, Fieldings stylistic virtues tend to interfere with his technique as a novelist, because a patient selectiveness of vision destroys our belief in the reality of report, or at least deviates our attention from the content of the report to the skill of the reporter. There would seem to be some inherent contradiction between the ancient and abiding literary values and the distinctive narrative technique of the novel. (Watt, p. 95)

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    at once fresh and rapidly digestible.

    3. Toward Verification, or maybe Validation19

    In the case of Robinson Crusoe, the authority (the semanticizing force) of the modern

    novel is Robinson Crusoe, who exists in a semiotic field where multiple epics are

    intersecting. One such epic is capitalism, which we see exerting its evaluations of reality

    through Crusoes constant shopkeeper tallying of accounts owed and due, supplies

    retrieved and conserved, and not least of all in his volatile attitude toward money:

    I smild to my self at the Sight of this Money. O Drug! said I aloud, what art thou good for? Thou art not worth to me, no not the taking off of the Ground; one of those Knives is worth all this Heap; I have no Manner of use for thee, een remain where thou art, and go to the Bottom as a Creature whose Life is not worth saving. However, upon Second Thoughts, I took it (page 43)

    That smiling to himself, that chastisement of his own greed, is a slim moment of

    Robinson standing outside the force of capital (distilled into its excrescence as cash). He

    is very concretely outside the system of capitalism, being alone on an island, where his

    conditions are such that a rusty knife is of more use than all the jewels of Arabi. But he

    has brought Capitalism with him, it is a part of his identity, its force is ingrained in him

    such that he cant look at the world without eyes that valuate it as capital. Crusoes

    capitalism isnt an isolated force, for it exists within a network of other values, such as

    his attitude toward Labor and Time, which he justifies after a few pages devoted to bread-

    making:

    This observation of the necessary directness of reportage needs be modified to fit with the

    Semantic Model, which does propose that the modern novel is inherently more direct than the previous literary forms, only, this directness is not situated in the manner of the modern novels style or its structure, but rather in the mediation which its virtualized subject performs between their experience and the various forces which intrude upon it. In fact, because the novel exists in an Intra-Epic field, these epics are baring down upon the modern subject indirectly, even subconsciously, so that style and structure in novels later than Defoe and Richardsons are themselves used to combat and modify these systems, and therefore establish the modern subject as dominant over the epic forces which would appropriate her into themselves, as their extension, mouthpiece, or victim. 19 While the Semantic Model can be used (as will be shown) as another way of reading a particular instance of the novel form, it is primarily concerned with the construction of literature, over its consumption. As a conceptual model, however, it should be useful for either endeavor.

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    Any one may judge the Labour of my Hands in such a Piece of Work; but Labour and Patience carryd me through that and many other Things: I only observe this in Particular, to shew The Reason why so much of my Time went away with so little Work, viz. That what might be a little to be done with Help and Tools, was a vast Labour and requird a prodigious Time to do alone, and by hand. (page 84)

    So little Work does not mean laziness or lack of activity on the part of Crusoe, but

    rather a dearth of product resulting from his productivity. Defoe has constructed a poetics

    of tedium through Crusoes patient (in the sense of long-suffering) industrialism, where

    the arena in which Crusoes strength, wit, and character are tested is, in the first half of

    the novel, a struggle to survive in harsh material circumstances with only his knowledge

    and will, which Crusoe presents directly to us in long sentences fraught with commas of

    very little rhythmic regularity. All of this goes to heighten the moments of success and

    violence which release the tension of Crusoes laborious relation of his context.

    This analogue of Time which Defoe has created establishes a floor through which the

    Intra-Epic field can be navigated, especially in the second half of the novel, when Crusoe

    begins to intersect with other cultures. Possibly the most direct proof of the extrusion

    of a cultural epic onto the personal subject comes on page 124, when Crusoe reconsiders

    his attitude toward the cannibals:

    How far these People were Offenders against me, and what Right I had to engage in the Quarrel of that Blood, which they shed promiscuously one upon another, I debated this very often with my self thus; How do I know what God himself judges in this particular Case; it is certain these People either do not commit this as a Crime, it is not against their own Consciences reproving, or their Light reproaching them. They do not know it be an Offence, and then commit it in Defiance of Divine Justice, as we do in almost all the Sins we commit, They think it no more a Crime to kill a Captive taken in War than we do to kill an Ox; nor to eat humane Flesh, than we do to eat Mutton It followd necessarily, that I was certainly in the Wrong in it, that these People were not Murtherers, in the Sense that I had before condemnd them, in my Thoughts

    Here we find a virtual subject contending with the relativity of cultural systems. The

    one he carries in his breast requires serious contemplation not to apply to persons of

    another value system. The Judgment is passed on to a higher authority (page 125: they

    were National, and I ought to leave them to the Justice of God, who is the Governor of

    Nations, and knows how by National Punishments to make a just Retribution for National

    Offenses) after which, Crusoe finds a great Satisfaction for not rushing to do

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    something hed regret. In the midst of this passage, Crusoe had compared his possible

    preemptive strike to the actions performed by the colonizing Spaniards, a bloody and

    unnatural piece of Cruelty, against the natives of America. He is aware of the abuses of

    a different brand of his Christianity, when it is applied blindly, without empathy, to other

    cultures. He recognizes that the authority within his culture might not extend beyond his

    culture, providing him an opportunity to stand outside that authority, as its adjudicator

    and translator.

    The opportunity of violence does come, however, and through his confrontation with

    the cannibals Crusoe gains his companion Friday. Their relationship is established fairly

    quickly in Crusoes favor, as if they dynamic of master and servant is a cross-cultural

    constant. It is when Crusoe attempts to indoctrinate Friday into the Christian religion that

    is shown Crusoes ineptitude in the promulgation of the logic of his Christian system:

    But, says [Friday] again, if God much strong, much might as the Devil, why God no kill the Devil, so make him no more do wicked?

    I was strangely surprised at his Question, and after all, tho I was now an old Man, yet I was but a young Doctor, and ill enough qualified for a Casuist, or a Solver of Difficulties I therefore diverted the present Discourse between me and my Man, rising up hastily, as upon some sudden Occasion of going out; then sending him for something a good way off, I seriously prayd to God that he would enable me to instruct savingly this poor Savage.

    Confounded by his theological system, he is confronted again by his Christianitys

    boundary, which here lies in that he cant get it to makes sense to Friday. He does persist

    in explaining certain aspects of his faith, such as his abhorrence of: the Policy of making

    a secret Religion, in order to preserve the Veneration of the People to the Clergy, is not

    only to be found in the Roman, but perhaps among all Religions in the World, even

    among the most brutish and barbarous Savages. (page 157) Like the master-servant

    dynamic, so the abuse of authority is trans-cultural.

    Ironically enough, Crusoe does act as a sort of priest, initiating his faithful Friday in

    the rites of Western weaponry: I let him into the Mystery, for such it was to him, of

    Gunpowder, and Bullet, and taught him how to shoot. (page 160)

    Crusoes location of Authority in himself is exemplified with the introduction of first

    Friday and then others into his self-referent system of life: My island was now peopled,

    and I thought myself very rich in Subjects; and it was a merry Reflection which I

    frequently made, How like a King I lookd. (page 174) Later on, when a European ship

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    arrives, and a dispossessed Captain is brought on shore to be presumably murthered,

    Crusoe qualifies his assistance of the Captain:

    Well, says I, my Conditions are but two. 1. That while you stay on this Island with me, you will not pretend to any Authority here 2. That if the Ship is, or may be recoverd, you will carry me and my Man to England Passage free. (page 184)

    It is telling that first and foremost, Crusoe wishes his Authority to be preserved (he is

    the sole definer of terms, within his system), and then his second condition, though it is

    ostensibly about his salvation from his island, is concluded with a monetary caveat: he

    will not have any sort of debt held over him, should he be got to England.

    Robinson Crusoe, as the story of a man removed from his society, provides a clean

    and clear examination of the working out of the modern novel within an Intra-Epic field.

    The parabolic arc is encapsulated by the interior of the subject, who interacts with his

    exterior context by searching for his existential meaning in his relationship with his

    environment. This relationship, as detailed above, provides an arena for him to work out

    the larger systems of capitalism, Christianity, and what they mean to him personally. By

    viewing the modern subject as a crossroads of greater epic structures, we are able to

    view the novel itself under various lights without those lights necessarily eclipsing the

    others. Robinson Crusoe is not about capitalism or about the Protestant Work Ethic, or

    Colonialismrather, it is about a subject who uses these various systems to build (or

    semanticize) his own life. Robinson Crusoe and Robinson Crusoe thus necessitate

    eachother: the novel and the subject it presents are at the same work: to establish

    themselves as distinct and self-willed entities within history and the history of literature.

    This work is exemplified quite clearly in Robinsons justification for writing down his

    circumstances, even though no one will ever read them:

    I now began to consider my Condition, and the Circumstances I was reducd to, and I drew up the State of my affairs in Writing, not so much to leave them to any that were to come after me, for I was like to have but few Heirs, as to deliver my Thoughts from daily pouring upon them, and afflicting my Mind; and as my Reason began now to master my Despondency, I began to comfort my self as well as I could, and to set the good against from worse, and I stated it very impartially, like Debtor and Creditor, the Comforts I enjoyd, against the Miseries I suffrd (page 53)

    4. Conclusion

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    The Semantic Model laid out in this paper is not intended to explain modern literature in

    toto, nor could it do such a thing, as it now stands. Rather, it is hoped that by describing

    the manner in which literature is assembled, we can see the novel as indeed an innovation

    in the way in which meaning is conveyedthrough a highly developed manipulation of

    textual elements to model a virtualized world full of forces ranging from immediate

    physical sensations and mood swings, to haunted castles, island ecosystems, geopolitical

    conflicts. The modern novel is a medium which, existing between epics, uses these epics

    as scaffolding to erect an epic-sized individual; a modern subject making a modern sense

    of things; where that making sense of things is a process of semanticizing and being

    semanticized by forces which are as it were in the background, on the horizon, exerting

    pressures which cause the subjects experience to take on a certain shape. This shape isnt

    the shape of a parabola anymore, unless that parabola be the gabling on which has grown

    this swollen vine producing a wealth of self at every stage of its arc.

    Yet this question remains: what next? What comes next, after an author has

    developed a style, accrued to herself a number of epithets & logical pivots in the form of

    statements; after she has learnt the subjective poetics and the devices of plot; after she has

    tuned her ear to character and her eye to social relationships; after she has proliferated a

    unique lore and then unified this into an epicand after she has done all that, and then

    worked her way to a modern subject, who struggles his way through the space between

    her epics and her world and other epics and other worldsis there an innovation to be

    grappled withis there a further field? Would she use various genres as her semiotic

    units, to breach into that uncharted plane of meaning? Or is this already covered in post-

    modernism or post-post-modernism? I am convinced there is innovation to be had,

    and not at the expense of relevance. I am drawn to this quote by Wittgenstein, for in it I

    hear the greatest possibility for a new literature: My work consists of two parts, the one

    presented here plus all that I have not written. And it is precisely this second part that is

    the important one.20

    Literatures progress has always come from between words, from between images &

    thoughts, from between statements and actions, from between characters, between

    dramas, between epicsas though fiction were a fabric, as if text were a textile, that

    20 Paul Engelmann, Letters From Wittgenstein With a Memoir, Tr. L. Furtmller, Ed. B.F. McGuinness (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1967), page 143.

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    clothe one thing in order to undress21 another.

    21 That is, address.

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    McGuinness. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1967. Frye, Northrop. The Educated Imagination, Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1964. Gallagher, Catherine. The Rise of Fictionality. The Novel. Ed. Franco Moretti. Princeton:

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    California, 1957. Whitehead, Alfred North, and Bertrand Russell. Principia Mathematica. Cambridge: UP, 1925 "The "Basic" Plots in Literature." Frequently Asked Reference Questions. N.p., n.d. Web. 30 May

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