- Or,
Carter's
seductions
plus Hoffman's composes,
respectively...
“Ambassador:
Dr Hoffman is coming to storm the ideological castle of which at
present, my dear Minister, you are the king.
(This
was a minor preliminary sortie. He fluttered his darkened lashes at
us and tinkled with diminutive laughter.)
Minister:
He has made his intentions in that direction abundantly clear. As far
as we can tell, he opened hostilities perhaps three years ago and by
now there are no directions left in the city while the clocks no
longer answer to the time.
Ambassador:
Yes, indeed! The Doctor has liberated the streets from the tyranny of
directions and now they can go anywhere they please. He also set the
timepiece free so that now they are authentical pieces of time and
can tell everybody whatever time they like. I am especially happy for
the clocks. They used to have such innocent faces. They had the
water-melon munching, opaquely eyed visages of slaves and the Doctor
has already proved himself a horological Abraham Lincoln. Now he will
liberate you all, Minister.
Minister
: But ought the roads to rule the city?
Ambassador
: Don't you think we should give them a crack at the whip now and
then? Poor things, forever oriented by the insensitive feet of those
who trampled them. Time and space have their own properties,
Minister, and these, perhaps, have more value than you customarily
allow them. Time and space are the very guts of nature and so,
naturally, they undulate in the manner of intestines. [...]”
(; Carter, from The Infernal Desires
Machines... ; p. 32-33.)
“Then
they came to a place where there were no more roads.” (;
Carter), from ' Master', (at short-story coll.;
Fireworks: Nine Profane Pieces, f.p. 1974.)
--------------------------------------------
The RECOMS:
The
Infernal Desire Machines of Doctor Hoffman
(novel)
by
Angela Carter (1940-1992)
(1972),
Penguin repr. -94; 221 p.
Mademoiselle
de Scudéri. A
tale of the Times of Louis XIV. (short-story/ novella)
by
E.T.A. Hoffman (1776-1822)
(Hesperus
2002 ; Orig. published 1819) ; 85 p.
;
Recommendations III / 2016
; Seems I now had to 'flee' of my earlier decision not to represent any more British authors on these selections. Guess' the (decision) reverted and canceled for this particular chapters part, won't much undermine our further prospected reviews on fiction. Having (relative) recent read somewhat Angela Carter-stories I considered this novel a most proper selection here. (Though, here referred several other examples from her prose, actually any would've quite well made selected example. A funny thing to mention, that I've not read most any her books as translations, since I didn't need to. 'Suppose them likely would've lost somewhat much translated from original language.) ; Not forgetting also E.T.A. Hoffman selected for this chapter, accompanying. ; And to mention, to any 'peculiar' or sophisticated terms I've tried provide the explanations/descriptions on.
But (originally) this, our celebratory chapter no 50, was meant
devoted on Denis Diderot (1713-84). ...Who was amongst some of
most central figures from the (late) 1700s Encyclopedists, and
important character cons. that periods philosophic thought, the
Enlightenment -movement in general, cons. the cultures and
social of (that) time.
...Of
the Reasons making him that interesting, or worth the selection by
his own, merely is that Diderot fx seems described from from having
possessed and maintained, many ways, more of a modern flexibility at
his views, an' thinkin. (At least in comparison from majority of
usual noted, and perhaps more renown, his contemporaries - Rousseau,
Voltaire, first come for mind, of course. ...Suppose', if I had
to say, the Voltaire's influence on Diderot maybe also was more
significant. (Diderot's best renown work, though, frmo editing that
Great Encyclopedia.)
;
Interesting qualities on Diderot (esp.), also are fx that he seems
said taken the philosophical questioning farthest among those renown
late 1700s philosophers (Though sceptical thought having had
it's origins from longer pasts, in both antique and 'modern'
philosophy.). Also, while not perhaps quite as similar talent of his
written fiction than fx Rousseau, he certainly influenced lot
to the philosophical thought of his era. Fx, ao. some Diderot's
philosophical essays contemplate on the arbitrarity of the senses and
on certain physical impairements, ie seem take under observation how
superficial by then prevailed/usual views of some biological traits,
such as sight (blindness), and hearing (deaf-mutedness) actually
were. By his times concepts and morals, like can be guessed, belief
to such impairments of to be unchangeable and permanent was lot more
stronger than fx on present, some medical 'miracles' and 'inventions'
reached every other day. (...Actually, cons. the
hearing/deaf-muted – I think, I recall that was from – a
development and carried surgical operation then after a fewsome years
proved right the Diderot's claims, or the argument he had made on
that. - The texts, namely the 'Lettre
sur les aveugles à l'usage de ceux qui voient',
from 1749, and 'Lettre
sur les sourds et muets.' , 1751.)
;
...As well, Diderot's said from had rather early developed
suppositions/views about Nature, resembling for what later emerged to
be known as evolutionary
theory.
(Diderot's formulations were purely on conceptual
levels,
though. Originated to/from basis of then emerged knowledge from found
fossils unlike to any existed animals and other (random) excavated
find. (Nor did he develop it for any specifically 'structured'
Natural historical views - iow, not for anything similar to Darwin.)
Also
is notable that, apart many Diderot's philosophical writings (and
that vast scope of writings on Encyclopedia
itself, some 1000 separate entries by his), relative few from his
other works saw publication during his life. Fx most of the 'fiction'
written by him wasn't censored by press of the time, but he actually
rejected publicising it, some simply due from that might've
represented too risky undertaking at the circumstances of the period.
So fx some
postward most appreciated
novels by
Diderot's writing – La
Religíeuse
(p. 1796, but written around 1780), and Jacques
le Fataliste et son maitre
(p.
1793) were both left somewhat unfinished during his life-time.
However the novels still make quite interesting reads.
; Fx, that
La Relígieuse
is a strong description about what the extremes still at the 1700s
prevailed (distorted) “religiousness” permitted and did maintain.
Merely that about how the prevailed state-religion, could fx by the
laws-binding system condemn the younger
daughter's of families (w. the limited stature or wealth) for
Monasteries, by the oath sworn for life. (Commonly, often while them
still underaged. Occasionally the terms were not that strict or the
conditions appeared bit more negotiable, but the fact was that
subjects to this practice had no say in the process. Pretty much in
manner the underaged presently are not considered liable from not to have
any control over the(ir) property, sex/marriage-questions, any
juridiscal decisions or choices.) ...Which actually the main theme on
novel. Diderot's 'blasphemies' directed on sex and religion also seem
the apparent reasons for it not was published during his life-times.
(In spite from that book not contains anything exactly pornographic or
even sexually disturbing.)
...Suffices
at least to (somewhat) from explain the reasons from Diderot's
decision of to favor the absolute atheism,
as a principle, or in his thought. And along that opposing, ao from
described reasons, extremes of an orthodox Catholism. (Or say, it's
most dominative practices, in essence/practice was the same for
official state-religiousness on his times.) In fact, that choice (of
atheism) was by the time far more daring an attitude, even if from
level of adapted 'methodology' at philosophy. – Notice; I'm not
saying so from any atheistic conviction, 'cause actually,
practically, nothing
could be more distant of my own principles. But feels to me,
Diderot's decision on atheism would've been almost unavoidable to
him. (One can, if wish, compare that to our own ages, where
everything is quite more firmly and 'favorably' rooted at the decided
profanity. During the 1700s it still was in real sense more daring a
choice, even if held mostly by among the fewsome from intelligentsia,
or within intellect elités.).
Scepticism as an
'attitude' too, is nowadays more of a 'regular principe' held, and
some 'inherited belief', nowadays (on society) backed by our
traditions rooted at development of the biology and natural sciences.
Resultantly people at least unconsciously also are less assured of
any 'Divine causes'. (Often, or even more commonly when they'd say
so, even.)
...To
explain further/more precise, I guess, more comparable decisions (on
Diderot's 'principal atheism'), by nowadays, would fx be from
deciding not of buy any stuffs from markets, etc., and instead
manufacture/cultivate one's needs by yourself. More comparable – as
any life's principle – to Diderot's 'committed' atheism than any
present days modern atheism, I mean. There are people who live that
manner described I know (I don't, though.), even if it being rare by
our times, these corners.
...More
generally it's pretty much a question of a choice btw the principal
individualism and
social custom(s). Decisions very much similar to the essential
questions, or some w. major importance, at that late 1700s period of
Enlightenment-thought.
; And I also think that one of the great benefits – some blessings
having come down to our days from the said century's "struggle of
minds" (/'souls' if you rather prefer that term), – is that you don't anymore feel obliged to choose, all in
all. (Hell burns in flames just as apparent here at the surface than
at anywhere 'in the deeps', or, alternatively high there,
somewhere.) 'Cause choices are transmitted, these days, basically
from within the 'mothers milk', no way out of the choices –
actually not via ones own deciding, even. But, quite as well, it's
sometimes at least very relieving from to know that you
don't have to bear all the crap – In this
life can quite as well leave out all the burdens. I mean, of course
these aspects referred were centuries ago. In spite of that, one can
at least sometimes wonder whether (or by which manner) would've it
been from the modern progresses – of culture, morals, social customs, democracy, tolerance -
without the great 'opposing thought' by the Enlightenment.
; Furthermore, I think these
aspects also have at least little resemblance to fx that from Carter
by subtitling her earliest short-stories (more on those a few
paragraphs after...) for 'Nine
profane
pieces'. Black is white, white is black –
such as they say. (If we want some modern consecrations let's at
least call them w. the proper adjective.) If you really want some
worship, then be sure to give it a little 'whip' too...cause worship
inevitably leads for some order. (The order leads for hierarchies.) ...Albeit, I mean not say more on
that.
;
...Anyway, despite that this said book (La
Religieuse)
not saw it's publication during Diderot's life-times, (larger) parts
seem circulated among his 'enlightened' companions. And, as well the
'high elite' was followin', even if merely secretly or at least not
anyhow 'openly'. (Fx some such enlightened monarchs included
Catherine
the 2nd,
of Russia, etc...) – Namely, them read chapters from it via the
Grimm's
(Baron Friedrich
Melchior von Grimm,
1723-1807) edited
Correspondance littéraire
(The 'magazine' had other contributors too, though. It said consisted
'...of
two letters a month that were painstakingly copied in manuscript by
amanuenses safely apart from the French censor...').
; ...Of Grimm's
adopted views seem it said his thought to been on
'...religious and philosophical opinions...entirely skeptical.' (;
as on that on a Wikip.-entry) ...Grimm an 'art critic and journalist'
– he also did contribute to the Encyclopédie
by rather early from time – but it said that journal (apparently)
was Grimm's main channel. From it's content seem noted that in
time his witty remarks enlarged for wider topics like
'political, artistic, social and religious'
issues. However, even cons. the scope of the said topics from his
journal, the overall description of the man don't give that positive
impression, apparently. (...means some other 'dealings' – Probably
irrelevant to this, see of preced. wikip-link.) He's also said
from introduced Mozart-family
(Leopold Mozart, the father of Amadeus) on Versailles' court, etc. But, in brief, leaves that an
impression kind of a, sort from, some 'Diplo(mathi)docus' of his times...maybe.
;
...By the way, alongside for these notes happened read a few love
letters by Rousseau's writing. (Not too attentively, but
alongside.) And what an uncomparable skill and sophistication his
sentences/words at those seemed from express! Indeed, what the
mastery of language and everything. (Didn't change my any
favoring on most about Rousseau's thought, but made me think there
maybe certain truth say Diderot from possessed qualities
from '...broader in
his interests, [and,
having had more] critical
insight, ... [of not]
enclouded by envy and spite.' (Tancock,
preface on that La Religieuse., 1972 ed.) ...Even that any such cultivated
appreciatives and 'hazy' adjectives maybe usually only misleading,
merely confusing to any reliable view. ; ...But, soforth, only this
much on Diderot was considered possible. – That so 'cause I
then also noted the obvious limitations on my French, to the main
impediment of better familiarizing on him. (Perhaps we'll have a
chance on Diderot discussed more in particular on some place postward
from this...)
-----------------
“[...]
There is no room in Sade's impeccable logic for the well-upholstered
wishful thinking that would like the poor to have more money if that
did not mean we ourselves had less. To be a woman is to be
automatically at a disadvantage in a man's world, just like being
poor, but to be a woman is a more easily remedied condition. If she
abandons the praxis of feminity, then it is easy enough to enter the
class of the rich, the men, provided that one enters it on terms of
that class. …'It was no accident that the Marquis de Sade chose
heroines and not heroes,' said Guillaume
Apollinaire.”
(Carter)
; from Sadeian woman.
Exercise in cultural
history. (; p. 89-90.)
Virago
1979.
; My
observations on Carter mainly aim be/stay at limits from what on
following presented various quotes – Any likely limitless and
voluminous researchful material on her fictions is not visited –
just as I thought better keep this to some minim. ...See, I'm quite
aware that Carter, '...maybe the
most widely read author on Briton universities, by the turn of the
century' (As some bio, I did glance, seemed note) - must
also belong to some most carefully studied writer by her generation.
; Furthermore, don't expect me of say anything at this (on this novel
in the recom) to some postmodernist-fiction. Practically of
the similar reasons, I've not any sincere trust on that term either –
besides, seems it out of fashion by some time, now.
Due not had read too many from her any other novels either, this
mostly is gathered/devotes particular look mainly to her various
short-stories. Mostly works written during her
intensive/perhaps best renown period of writing, and published at
compilations about btw -74 to -94. Rushdie's forewords at
complete collected short-stories (by y. -95, named 'Burning
Your Boats') seem note the short-stories for Carter's most
successful works, perhaps for in the long-run to some most lasting.
Maybe it indeed so, or maybe not quite. At least her uses of language
- or style in general – gains it's best effects at those shorter
pieces. ...Although, in the same, must be said, I also consider
perhaps to some main work that cultural exploration/examination on
Sade's writings (Sadeian
Woman. Excercise
in cultural history, p.1979.)
'Pure
reason, applied to motion' ; ...Anyway, fx, I think
that on all from her fiction - and not solely on the
latter-day novels, such as Nights
at the Circus
(1984) or Wise
Children (1991) – a more traditional
narrative elements often prevail. (Albeit, I've not read those said novels,
while them seem on the times from publication been popularly and intensively awaited, probably later lot studied too.)
;
However, by any preferences, personally I've fx found a lots
from enchantment on the strong element of the Nature at Carter's
'tales'. It is very continuously present on her written fiction. - Or on at least on
most from the shorter stories. Yet, it's not usually, the very organic
Natures, a priori. (...In other words, not usually there very realistic
descriptions from, but the Nature often is felt very tangible
and from very much alive at many her text. I-o-w, not any landscapes and impressions about places
set represent only/merely to some decorative framings.) And (to my
finding) also seems it tell, perhaps, from her own experienced
impressions about. ...But actually, I know not a better story for
some example, than (these few lines from) a short-story by it's name
'The Erl King';
”His
eyes are quite green, as if from too much looking at the wood.
There
are some eyes can eat you.
The
Erl-King lives by himself all alone in the heart of the wood in a
house which has only the one room. His house is made of sticks and
stones and has grown a pelt of yellow lichen. Grass and weeds grow in
the mossy roof. He chops fallen branches for his fire and draws his
water from the streams in a tin pail.“(at collection
Bloody Chamber
, f. p. 1979.)
'...Eyes
quite green'
of 'too
much looking at the wood.' ...It
really feels from say smgth profound
on
the Natures essence, and there really is
'some eyes can eat you'.
Of course all of it set aforth/depicted on rather romanticed
manner,
Nature serves merely to part of an emotional reflections, usually in
close approximity to tensions by story's narrator. But (in it) the
mystery
of
Nature
isn't presented by means of separating the organic
natures
from story itself. Or, that aren't on any level
secondary (in narration) from what is observed mainly in the story.
;
...To some other good examples there's fx the
'The Smile of Winter' (Where the sea appears form
some background to a literary and contemplative self-reflections.) Or
the story 'Penetrating
to the heart of the Forest', sort of re-writing
from paradise-myth w. it's original sexual-romantic thematics been
intensified by an all prevailing realm of a (rain) forest, w. it's
real and mythical proportions, ...fx;
'...carefree children were their playfellows and their toys were birds, butterflies and flowers. …They quite forgot the dull town where they had been born. The green world took them for its own and they were fitting children of their foster mother... and, at night they slept together in plain, narrow bed on a floor of beaten earth while the window held the friendly nightlight of a soft, southern moon above them in a narrow frame.' (...etc. Both stories at -74 collection 'Fireworks. Nine profane pieces.')
;
...Probably the Carter's best known stories are mostly those some
where myths appear similarly 'reworked' and therefore given
recreative 'new blood'. Unavoidable from mention is that
renown piece 'Bloody
chamber', (of the year 1979, and w. the same name,
'Bloody Chamber and other stories') – perhaps the best known
example of her vampyrian rewritings. (However, in the story itself
there's not any supernatural incidents or it not by any other level
mythologized, except the apparent references from story's likely
origins. Torture chambers and decapitulations a'la Vlad Dracula and
Elisabeth Batory, but only on imaginary level, without too much
mystifications.) ...In short, nothing what in reality could not happen,
takes place in spite of the very 'vampyrian' tensions of the setting
and everything in combined. But then there's fx on Black Venus
(-p. 84) 'The Lady of
the House of Love' a story about an ageless vampire
(queen) whom is visited by the young cyclist. Some officer
('volunteer' to oncoming war then), doing time, spending his leisures
on '...exploring the
little-known uplands of Romania.' The man also has
'…chosen the most rational mode of transport in the world for his
trip around the Carpathians.' And, is expressed '(to) Ride a bicycle
is in itself some protection against superstitious fear, since the
bicycle is the product of pure reason applied to motion.'
Resultatively then that very decoratively painted myth is revealed
(...for 'dusts') within the story, a story whose setting/timing from
incidents couldn't represent more proper place or 'frames' for it,
'cause it begins at origins of our modern era, previous century
killing fields of the 1st World War. Pretty much (perhaps) w. impression on tales by that Hoffmann (see on followin), fx it has
setting on castle, and there prevails a melancholic 'romantic mood'...Albeit, the story builds completely between that old
vampyre and the (bicycling) 'protagonist'. ; ...Then, w. the more
'natural' themes again, by it's origins, there's fx 'Peter
and the Wolf', sometimes said for the most
realistic (and, from that reason also most scary) interpretation
from the werewolf-myth. That so, from the 'wolf child' discovered in
tale is depicted mostly from all animal-characteristics, ie story not
reflects any usual (/the 'human-like') superhuman 'horrifications',
typical for it's kind. (The collection of -79 also contains couple
shorter stories built on werewolve-theme, them bit less naturalistic.)
; In
Carter's latter comprised collections (maybe concerns last couple
short-story books, the last issued post mortem.), the more
realistic narration/topics become slight more common. (While not
anyhow prevailing, on some stories.) On latter collections there also
some stories whose main 'plot' seems built around cultural figures
or 'icons' from the 'Victorian' past, such as Poe, Baudelaire
- mainly of the 1800s, iow.. ; Then there is fx that detailed
descriptive depiction from the final days of a Borden-family (ie on
Lizzy Borden, 'The
Fall River Axe Murders', on collection Black Venus)
...The afterward remarks seem also tell Carter of had planned some
sort compilation around that subject, but only other story wrote during her
life was the 'Lizzie's
tiger', (that on last collection, p. 1993.)
What
typical to Carter's 'latter years' narrative/fiction, is it leave
merely an impression of the historical and researched information
'carefully' written out offering plausible and almost
'non-fictional' interpretations to incidents described. Typical on fx that Axe River Murders-story, since it handles a story
which had until that been popularised to part of a mythical horrorist
imagination – ie, lot distanced from it's actual origin. ...Careful
reader can't of course avoid from recognize, that ultimately it
(Carter's 'interpretation') has to remain on level of fiction. Lizzie
or her family as personnel, or characters by precise
knowledge (we could assume from have) being unreachable. Yet, what makes it quite appalling a
tale is exactly how logical Carter's descriptions from the cultural
setting and the period (the Belle epoque, y. btw ca 1890-1914)
are created from to offer the story it's (likely) backgrounds. Main
view-point again that all is related by (relative) dispassionate way
- And yet the 'special effects', sparingly used, via fictional
language give it more credibility than some plain retelling the story
would have. ...But I considered this to leave us some place for
cite, even if only very shortly. This following from story's early
part, where social background is - to my finding – nicely
described;
“Don't the gilded of the Fall River Line signify all the squandered luxury of the gilded age within their mahogany and chandeliered interiors? But don't they sail away from Fall River, to where, elsewhere, it is the Belle Epoque? […] The Indians who lived here first had the sense to take off their buckskins when hot weather came and sit up to their necks in ponds; not so the descendents of the industrious, self-mortifying saints who imported the protestant ethic wholesale into a country intended for siesta and are proud, proud! of flying in the face of nature. In most latitudes with summers like these, everything slows down.
… men will go out into the furnace wrapped up in flanel underclothes, linen shirts, vests and coats and trousers of sturdy woollen cloth, and they garotte themselves with necklaces too, they think it so virtuous to be uncomfortable.”
;
...Along w. the mentioning 'Our
Lady of the Massacre', the better known(/my most
favorites) of her short-stories seem now referred at this. Probably
the said narrative inspired on basis of then (ie near that, seems
wrote on 1980s) anthropological and historical studies
on relations btw the native americans (indians) and early colonizers.
An interesting aspect, perhaps, it been later discovered on
statistics made of the captived persons, the whites more rarely from
wished/purported on any escaping. (Not necessarily too difficult from
believe, knowing the social hierarchies and inequalities of European
societies and 'settlements' by the time.) That story too on coll. Of
-84. ; ...And finally, bit similarly closer to any 'realistic'
fiction – while not perhaps with any resemblance on it's
historism (lacks that) - is then also the short-story built around
Pabst (a German movie director, b/w, prior and war-time), the
story named 'Merchant
of Shadows' (at that -93 collection.)
-------------------------------------
“Watch
now, spectator. Before you is a fully wound machine. Slowly its
spring will unwind the entire span of a human life. It is one of the
most perfect machines devised by the infernal gods for the
mathematical annihilation of a mortal.”
(Cocteau), preface to 'The Infernal Machine',
play. (Orig.
p. 1934, of the vers. of 1958)
; Conserning the novel here
(recommended), what at first comes for mind from followin' few
paragraph feels it to rather typical dystopian kind fiction - on story's beginning. One at
first notices, (that) there those 'wide spaces' depicted, visual
descriptions loaded with the powerful (doomsday-) images evoked, surrounding city-blocks and then (there) are some 'unreal objects' – Such
as, on this quoted paragraph below, are the (imagined, 'spelled') 'monstrous
birds'. (With some 'odd' behaviours
and features that also are integral to descriptions about that 'macabre
landscape');
“The sense of space was powerfully affected… Often in the vaulted architraves of railway stations, women in state of pearly, heroic nudity, their hair elaborately coiffed in the stately chignons of the fin de siecle, might be seen parading beneath their parasols as serenely as if they had been in the Bois de Boulogne, pausing now and then to stroke, with the judiciously appraising touch of owners of racehorses, the side streaming engines which did not run any more. And the very birds of the air seemed possessed by devils. Some grew to the size and acquired the temperament of winged jaguars. Fanged sparrows plucked out the eyes of little children. Snarling flocks of starlings swooped down upon some starving wretch picking over a mess of dreams and refuse in a gutter and tore what remained of his flesh from his bones. The pigeons lolloped from illusory pediment to window-ledge like volatile, feathered madmen, chattering vile rhymes and laughing in hoarse, throat voices, or perched upon chimney stacks shouting quatations from Hegel. But often, in actual mid-air, the birds would forget the techniques and mechanics of the very act of flight and then they fell down, so that every morning dead birds lay in drifts on the pavements like autumn leaves or brown wind-blown snow. Sometimes the river ran backwards...” ; ('The Infernal Desire Machines...' ; p.19-20.)
It
seems difficult decide whether we /the readers) should feel more
horror on these images of terror and violence, or of how all that
appears yet shown/reflected only for some passing incident, The 'racehorses still runnin', 'pigeons lolloping'....And yet the
birds are also noted just as mortal and powerless as the people seem
be amongst that massive collapse on society – it said fx the birds from sometimes
'lay in drifts at pavement'. And, is the real horror, we migh feel of
those passages, from the said/described Hegelian-architecture
collapsin...?
;
Anyway, the impression by (the) utopian/dystopian elements is very
apparent 1970s from it's 'tone'/impression it leaves from. There are characteristics in description
which seem owe, at least something, for Orwellian world(s). Was rather popular and usual source during the decade, of course. (Actually, from the level
of 'atmosphere', perhaps also by setting, I think, there some
resemblance fx for Alan Moore's V for
Vendetta-story. That 1980s graphic-novel, w. some
features/elements borrowed of that historic Guy Fawkes-plot. Or, at least the movie has that for story plot. The apparent
references for totalitarism (fascism acc. Moore, I think it read) also contain some similarity – Even that
on Carter's description all that merely remains to some 'decorative elements'.) ; Resemblance for several other 1970s art works, too. And, for
the (then) existent real events and horrifications, quite as much: Fx, cons.
the year of novels creation/publication and the above
quated paragraphs, on the collapsing societies - Seems it possible from trace for the typical horrors of a post-nuclear age(/wars) - quite
directly. And - maybe only undirectly – for several nearby events,
like fx the Biafran- and Vietnam-wars, fresh in the
memory still then (or, just 'beyond the last corner'). Not long after...the oil-crisis soon were been seen, the 1980s (w. it's wars
and crises) just around 'the next corner' – But those associations only by some imaginable level at this.
; In
spite of that (the said elements/descriptions) Carter's fiction seem
almost without exceptions exist on the level from fantastic, and
there's not (ever) any (visible) critique from fx of then prevailed
politics, or smght like the post-colonialism, etc. In short, she seems on most her
fictions more interested from technique by established, 'traditional'
(often white, male), narratives by literature. Seductive and
authoritative narratives, it's most typical – but sometimes often,
hidden – features. And there seems, most often, at her
writing used various means and solutions of to break those
established 'normatives'. Various solutions used, actually. (For
example, – but let's not go too deep on that, would need further
more precise look.)
;
...But further from - (soon) after that what quoted on above –
all that carefully built construction as backgrounds for the
enjoyable scifistic-/utopian fictions is then abrupt swept aside, unexpectably and sudden. Narration takes it's own turns, and for complete
different directions...No easy solutions or neat slow floating within
the story's development, reader not permitted to relax by being
carried neatly away with any 'dream-like' romantic or exiting,
'prophesied' and nerves-thrilling futuristic plot. Not any such
common-place and fictional 'baits' to the reader of some 'dystopian
fictions'. Not any camouflages - As from the very begins of it story
here is offered only to some sidedish. The main dish is
elsewhere, you find out yourself (seems it say.) ; In brief,
she seems practically not interested on any manner of technique or
means by how fiction might imitate, how it traditionally has tended
depict the reality. Actually, she maybe is/feels mainly interested
what are the main “questions” or roots of any fictionalisation:
Why the form once was more important to narratives. And why, exactly
how, these forms did develop – within time. How the Time and Space
from begins did become constructed (to some literature form). And
from hence that, also books fragmented narrative. Even the time
runnin' backwards (Of what the river, on a quote above, to some
emblem from.)
;
...But since my scifistic interests were bit awoked, I then fx viewed
some parts of Margaret Atwoods collected essays (In
Other Worlds. SF
and the Human Imagination, p. 2011), for gather
some idea whether I'd figure some other view-points to Carter's
stories (/novels), mainly as some form of a science-fiction.
...Yet, as far as I was able to consider any ideas relevant to this
(view-points on Carter's novel), decided us here to limit that on
followin' views – Them cons. the earliest roots of the 'genre';
“In both 'Scientific romance' and 'science fiction,' the scientific element is merely an adjective; the nouns are 'romance' and 'fiction'- In respect to Wells, 'romance' is more helpful than 'fiction'.
'Romance,' in today's general usage, is what happens on Valentine's Day. As a literary term it has slipped in rank somewhat ...but it was otherwise understood in the nineteenth century when it was used in opposition to the term novel. The novel dealt with known social life, but a romance could deal with the long ago and the far away. It also allowed much more latitude in terms of plot. In a romance, event follows exciting event at a breakneck pace. As a rule, this has caused the romance to be viewed by the high literati – those bent more on instruction than on delight – as escapist and vulgar, a judgment that goes back at least two thousand years.
…
In the sinister portions of a romance, the protagonist is often imprisoned or trapped, or lost in a labyrinth or maze, or in a forest that serves the same purpose. Boundaries between the normal levels of life dissolve: vegetable becomes animal, animal becomes quasi-human, human descends to animal. If the lead character is female, an attempt will made on her virtue, which she manages miracuously to preserve. A rescue, however improbable, restores the protagonist to his or her previous life and reunites him or her with loved ones. ...” (On 'Ten ways of looking at The Island of Dr Moreau by H.G.Wells'.; p. 157-8.)
;
...So, if we should think the novel ('Dr Hoffman's...') to any
'dystopian effort', it only seems so in the limits by showing where
lie, perhaps, some main weaknesses of scifistic form. (More in general the
possibilities by fiction from to describe anything from the actual
reality.) – At least where fiction seen as 'imitation', by
any cases – to it's writers or readers. ...That also what the usual
dystopian-efforts quite as much does – Tries from invent or 'create'
some, albeit purely imagined, possibile realities to what
(presently) seen as necessities from the on-coming, the 'futures'. Then is some similarities to that old/'preceded form' by fiction (romance), fx, at books imaginous, adventurist
later chapters (fx the cannibal coasts, sailing on w. pirates at
seas), the plot following some 'breakneck pace', and also on mystifications
it contains at it's theme. (Fx, in some early chapters there are some
sacred 'religious objects'. By no coincidence, the objects
represented are accompanied by adverted sexual seductive languages.)
- 'Consecrated' objects, traceable to our 'modernity', might be also seen from representatives to our present very televisioned experience on/from life. Though it from 1970s, quite early timing cons. those adverted 'realities' as replacing the symbolic pictorials and narratives.
;
...Via books narrational solutions 'present' (a fictionalised
reality, means the novel) therefore seems set to meet the genre's early roots. Temporality, or the Time (linear time to
be precise), and the spatiality ('Travel', for
example), are particularly stressed, due of reasons that those make
the most obvious unbelievable and 'unreal' elements on a fiction. ; And at least it seems have (lot) similarity to some
efforts by literature, the inventions and changes brought by the
1700s Enlightenment-'project' – Ie on fiction mainly, but
then social changes cons. too. ...Though, can't say of being too well aware to make any good comparisons, let's mention – to
some example from – that already referred novel by Diderot,
'Jacques the Fataliste'. ; Noticeable too, on that
'Dr. Hoffman's...' books ending
is still rather more unbelievable, even partly disappointing cons.
books content/story – That so just because it really has some
ending. Of fictional sense it probably not matters, the fictional
time remains – despite any fragmenting efforts, any narrative
techniques created – necessarily, essentially linear. But the 'real
time' (whatever we should/could mean by it), is not.
; It
perhaps -to this place - also proper mention from Carter's other
fictions, that y. 1977 published novel The
Passion of New Eve. It seems fx often considered
to, sort from, sister-novel to this here recommended selection. On
'New Eve', the themes maybe are more centered around the
questions from an artificial/androgyne-humanity. (Also the violative
sexual elements are often said from surface on Carter's mid-period
writings. Fx, on this prior mainly discussed novel, both story's hero
and heroine are raped, of physically.) The bit later written 'New
Eve'-novel seems maybe more focused on the transitional nature of sex
than other aspects resembling the above presented novel. Some interpretations from the New Eve's plot
seem note it to parodise/make humors on the decades (1970s) militant
feminism. And then is other main ethical and sexual issues by that
decade; contraceptives, the sexual 'revolution' generally, the
'test tube babies', etc. ; Maybe there some similarities...Not
read that novel, so can't make any comparisons between them.
----------------
“Tell
Modesta, Tell...”
(;
Goliarda Sapienza), on Modesta
(L'arte del Gioia,
novel.)
In
combined, at Carter's writing there's also much from the romantique – as well as 'adaptations' from the adventurous and fantastical. Maybe the essential
quality from her writing, that all (mostly) is presented in a very
reasoned manner. Also, seems it said quite correctly, that she
intentionally nowhere lets the reader's attentions slip from, or
allow themselves the 'luxury' of falling unconscious from, that it's
fiction (equals narrative) they're reading. ;
...And besides, also from mention, there strong dramatic
elements in lot from that, so no wonder she seems at
1980s wrote a fewsome works to the stage.
Seems it, to the closing, then logically reminded her been from
most/mainly feminist fiction writer – Perhaps the most
famed and read by that time. At least since from mid/late 1970s to late 1980s (or until her death.) Mostly her fiction
reflects that 1970s...But that too I only say by my any impression from.
(Actually, must say, that I find it rather curious reads related to the said decade.) But the Angela's
fictions usually are very thoughts-inspiring prose, I've noted. And then also (is)
lot of a certain mor(t)al combat of being – And while it
seems (often) on her fictions presented under some romantic
'disguise'...that notable at most of her works. Sometimes very
picturesque and flowing colourful paragraphs, then bit of a
sledgehammer, all by sudden.
;
...So, ultimately, usually (it) said that her fiction (/this book
concerned) most noted influences were/having consisted of de Sade,
Hoffman (not to be left devoid of my praise on this), De
Quincey... ; ...de Quincey? Well...probably mostly that
would rather make some opposing 'influence', some anti- (...Not seen mentioned to
any sources for her fiction/writing.) - Thought this mainly from
reason that a certain kind mental image just happened arise
to my mind on these basis, partly due of reasons related for glancing
De Quincey's writing 'Knocking at the gates of Macbeth' –
Means, it just an image, or maybe a some cinemascopic picture, about
her (Carter) standing next to the huge wall of silence, w. an
elbow-full of books; a torn-out bible, cloth-bound volumes of a
Voltaire, Poe, Baudelaire, Defoe...(,maybe couple cultural
and social histories too), and knockin', volumes from Wittgenstein
and de Sade droppin to terra firma (ground shaken),
tomahawk tied at the waist - the axe, not that missile named
to some monument of an unproportionate lack of a comprehension -
and, furiously knockin'...
; Let us allow for the ends of this
this much of some mystification. (Orwell actually
paints slight resembling kind image about Dickens, on the latter
paragraphs from his essay, describing how he sometimes sees the
man writing down his books some mad gleam in the eyes, laughing
out loud... I think, merely that written just from to offer a little
'easing up', to (Orwell's) British contemporary readers, after the
“blasphemous” observances at Dickens' fictions former presented by
Orwell on that.) ; Supposin' there was on Carter's
works probably blasphemies enough...I need not here from invent or refer on any. So
these imaginations, like they say, just for some 'easin up'.
----------------------
...Neither
having from any comprihensive acquaintance on fiction by Ernst
Theodor Amadeus Hoffman – So, on this I'm not from compare
the fictions by Hoffman and Carter, any manner. Hoffman cons. this only
representing brief walk-through, mostly. (Yet, of course is the
aspect about Carter's novel by it's very name having an allusion
for, ie named to 'Dr
Hoffman's desire
machines...'. )
;
The last from (Hoffman's)
first names he seems decided take acc. that famous composer, btw.
And, seems it may have been somewhat significant decision.
(Mozart, W.A.
1756-91, to some reminders, we may also recall our former references
about
Grimm,
on begins of this post) Because normative
tastes
– likely - still long prevailed on 1700s at music and music
criticism, perhaps bit resembling from how Boileau's
L'Art poétique (1674)
had been applied for normative absolute auctoritat on lyric,
during the preceded century. Anyway,
unlike Beethoven,
Mozart
wasn't considered similarly merited 'classic' by that time – his
'place' as the principal romantique-epoch composer, wasn't quite that
confirmed. At least not like since has remained (...maybe).
But, soforth, Hoffman's choice to his second name - preferring the
romantic, admiring Mozart – might've shown for a bit 'riskier'
tastes by that time. (...maybe.)
;
Seems that during Hoffman's life his doings were more focused on
musical 'pests' (or trying to secure himself some official post
from), while already by then his efforts on literature seem gained
him most favor. ...On this basis, it maybe not surprising several his
works from bear names that'd be perhaps more 'proper' to musical
pieces; There is fx 'Jesuitkirche
in G.'
on
a short-story collection
'Nachtstucke'
(The collections name itself also reminder from music.) Most renown
story, possibly, is Nussknacker
– later also adapted for the ballet then composed by Tschaikovsky
(It's story orig. to Hoffman's written
Nussknacker
and Mausekönig,
p. 1809).
; Via
the mentioned Nachtstucke,
(1816-7, Orig. in two parts) Hoffman seems yet gained some fame and
apparently relative good sales. Yet fx some renown 'critics', Goethe
(J.W. 1749-1832) foremost, notably disapproved Hoffman's 'vulgar style' and his
subjects. (...The judgement becomes more understandable, perhaps, via
comparing from collection the story 'Ignaz
Denner' to
any Goethe's efforts closer to that kind 'popular romantic',
or 'demonic story' - differences being quite notable. Fx, if thinkin' that carefully built structure of Faust - a play, 1808. ...What at first comes to
mind from Faust is the alchemist chambers and medieval myths,
actually very romantic setting – But all yet is quite classicist by
it's 'tone'.) ; On Hoffman, the main focus at that story is depiction about
a leader to some gang of burglars who then, by treacherous means,
intend corrupt and deceit story's main character. The 'name-sake'
for story, that crook, also is created for so devilish by
characterics as can be...main impression it owes more to folks tales than for sophisticated recreated 'mythologies'. So no wonder if there was some envy on
part of that 'cultural giant' (such as Goethe justified described for.) In compared Faust also feels maybe slight
'out-of-place', by it's reliance on medieval and antique -
fears not exactly felt present, but some more ancient.
; For Hoffman's
strenghts seems often also listed his skills from blur any
limits btw the real and 'imagined' (or, to emphasize the emotionally
felt supernatural.) He also preceded the wider break-through from
(modern) techniques of descriptipting the inner emotions from
characters/personnel in the novel.
;
...Yet this much mainly noted just due the said period (late
1700s-1820s, about) still was also (relative) rooted in common
superstition, ie it did prevail in beliefs, persistently. (And in
fact seems said Hoffman was blamed of some demonism [...Since the Wikisource-definition seems avoid the term and uses 'Demonology' instead for the term (; acc. defn; '...branch of the science of religions which relates to superhuman beings which are not gods.', etc... it referred on above. Naturally we disclaim from all such popular commercial and profane cheap anti-religious humbugs, etc.] on his
stories, even – While for the tastes by any modern reader it not
feels from show anyhow immoral tales, mostly not even contains any supernatural
incidents.) ; On Hoffman's stories usually relative little happens (compared on any
modern 'standard'). Yet, as we should know, Hoffman often has
both, the good plot and well created setting. Usually his stories are
first realism, and only after that, say...the emotional
dwellings. Which some of the good characteristics noted to main
reasons from his popularity and to have gained place among
forefathers to horror fiction. Yet
there often is only some amount 'horrific', or descriptions of a seemingly
supernatural.
;
Other renown short-stories on collection fx that
'Jesuitkirche
in G.', and
'Das öde haus', 'Das Majorat' ; Then is, Der
Goldne Topf (1813), a short novella. Actually I
think it for my own favorite among Hoffman's shorter pieces. Also
worth mention to some landmark at birth of the modern
fiction...If we allow us from only little exaggerate. (On this case
too, Goethe becomes quite apparently in mind for comparison, since
there is fx the idea about fallin' on dream in the plot. Likewise
story's main character, young student, has lot from resemblance/owes
smght to Goethe's Werther.) ; ...Then is also the Die
Elixiere des Teufels (p. 1815, apparently, but the
latter part maybe on 1818), which I've not read yet. Although intend
to, so most what can be said is that it noted to a major piece later
said having influenced plentyful of authors – Dostoyevsky,
Stevenson, Hugo, maybe to some best renown, and, apparently Carter too.
---------------
:
This particular short-story/small novella recommended short-fiction
(Mademoiselle Scuderi)
occasionally is mentioned to some early 'archaic' form on what later
has become known as 'detective story'. Yet, mainly here selected
because it represents many usual qualities of Hoffman's fiction –
fx, has various small 'plot-turns' tied for a compact little story.
Then, fx that older female character (mdelle Scuderi) to some
(among) main personnel(s) in the story seems for quite unusual choice
– At least from the period/time that written considered. (Albeit, I
think, that not any manner examplary precedent of some such famous
character as Miss Marples...and sim.) In general, Hoffman's
female characters remain quite conventional levels, typical to era's
most romantic fiction, or what by then was written by men. Though,
can't say from too definite or 'absolute', all in all he seems
written about some 40 shorter stories.
Central
to it's plot is story about murderous thiefs/thefts threatening the
bourgeoise wealthy passengers on city streets. In the pasts, dark
passages often were only candle-lit, or lightless, on typical
town-alleys. Other aspects traceable for it's times of publication
(and probably near preceded tumultuous era), are also valuable
jewels (And their counterfeit. Though the story situates on a
period from Ludwig the XIVth, by precise.) ..Seems it explained that
by the time, often the regular people's main ownings, and especially
those of women, consisted only from fewsome valuable gems, such as
jewels. So the main topic by it also likely was more relevant cons.
the 'reading public' at the time, than we presently find it. ;
Conclusively, a novella worth reading, while it perhaps not
quite among any best of Hoffman's short-stories.
-------------------------------
; Finally, there maybe a few excuses permitted offered...I mean by this, that my slight reservations at these remarks, mostly on
basis from practice I've adopted/maintained now for some couple,
perhaps about one and half years a time. - Precisely, havin' taken a
habit from reading quite plentyful (indeed, much) of a
fiction (and mainly especielt the fiction). As the
downright followings I've then simply tended pour much of the results to these recoms. Largely so, because, this hasty 'schedule',
plentysome devouring of words by me, having quite served from
'finding out' (Or, of finding in, if you understand my meaning – in
the best cases, that's what the fiction does, it help's you to find
some perspectives...Or smght like.)
...´'Suppose
us now over most enthusiastic readings from that much of fictions.
(Anycase, the follow-ups should then contain merely more from
'factual' stuff and fictions less often, perhaps only every 2nd
recom.) ; And - it maybe also worth mention – these views presented
might probably bit suffer of my limited familiarity to any modern
prose/literatures. For example...that (peculiar) term, perhaps
formerly popular, 'magic realism' merely feels for me like
some large 'categorial sink', smght (where) lot is thrown, but relative
little then resurfacing. (Terms, categorial esp., are of course
always quite horrible.) ...Also, 'cause I'm also rather old-fashioned, supposing this
selection on Carter probably as far as we can go on anything from modern
fiction (Meaning her writing-style or it's technique by that, and not the timing when it been written.) (; G.U.J.)
-------------------
Pics:
...the
'vampire-sequels' of a
'Rhapsody
in Red'
by Billy
Graham
(from
Vampirella-mag, early 1970s. [ An interesting on (that latter pic), how
the vampire is depicted from not shown of to abhorring the light
(which has a rather central role on that) - Maybe it having become
immune for it? Or, even for more horrifying, doesn't it care from
being revealed (for sunlight) ? Is it desperate...? Of course it's
the candle light in the story, but the association is btw the
Darkness,
and,
Light. Maybe some very best stories of Graham's drawing. (All his stories not quite on same level of plot, but on that the story with some accomp. writer, probably Goodwin.) ]
; 'Whip and fingers' - of Metal Hurlant (1970s, detail of a cover) ; 'Wells portrait'- by Yuri Annenkov (1940s, about) ; 'Heathen-gods-a-raisin' - of Valiant [...Comics from about the 1950s/-60s. Not very impressive - Since its mainly the conventional and common-place by story. But the drawings by Harold R Foster are often very detaily and fine to look. ...Actually smght you not generally often find at more recent created mass-comics, at least if on colors.)
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