Archive for February, 2007

Adventures of Rivella

I find it interesting how Manley manages to ‘life-write’ through unconventional means. The “Adventures of Rivella” are told not by Rivella [DM] herself*, but rather by Lovemore–a former admirer to boot. Bravo madame! What an effective design if her goal is to paint a flattering self-portrait. Though DM is materially responsible for the text, the narrative frame she sets up absolves her of this direct responsibility. Implied (in this structure or mechanism of delivery) is some hidden authority in the reportage, or accounts, of others. The rumor mill, however, also wrecks her reputation, as Lovemore aptly describes. This frame occurs alongside a condensing of that psychologial probity that we saw earlier in Bunyan and Defoe. Lovemore is not omniscient, nor is he the heroine; in reading her life-story, we do so by his selective principle. So far this is pageturner for me…so much happens w/in one page. Events are truncated in this account (exactly how remains TBD), unlike the narrative turn we’ve witnessed in the self-penned, ‘conversion’ texts.

*well, at least as far as I’ve read

–Nancy Derbyshire

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Paper copy

A paper copy of the Manley book has been placed at the reserve desk–this edition (Broadview) has an immense amount of introductory and supplementary material to help you navigate the book.

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Aha! Here’s a Manley e-text

http://www.pierre-marteau.com/editions/1714-rivella.html

It’s not ideal–there are a lot of page numbers stuck into the text, but it will do if you do not have the Broadview edition of the text.

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Object Narratives

For your delectation, here’s an online essay from a doctoral candidate, Hannah Carlson, on those “object narratives” I mentioned in class:

http://www.common-place.org/vol-07/no-02/carlson/

 As Carlson notes:

The object narrative dates to the early eighteenth century in Britain and usually involves currency (Johnstone’s Chrysal; or, The Adventures of a Guinea [1760]) but also includes other articles of daily life: slippers and a bedstead narrate The History and Adventures of a Lady’s Slippers and Shoes (1754) and The History and Adventures of a Bedstead (1784), respectively. The pleasure of these tales comes from the unexpected insights (sometimes salacious) of an inanimate witness to human behavior, able to critically comment on “the Vices, Follies and Manners of the Present Age.” The object usually serves its owner (the slipper protects the foot, the bed provides comfort) who, in return, arbitrarily uses, sells, exchanges, and ultimately devalues it.

 Shades of Moll Flanders?

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Manley

Hi–It seems that although the GC owns a copy of the Manley book, they have not yet placed it on reserve because it’s out on loan and they didn’t realize that this library owns it.  Grrr!

 However!  I will place my personal copy on reserve before Monday–and it is available on Eighteenth Century Collections online….and available at the main branch of the NYPL…I will post when my personal copy has been placed at the library.  But if you are hoping to read it over the weekend, I would recommend Eighteenth Century Collections online or the NYPL (although there’s a possibility that I may deposit my personal copy at the reserve desk as early as tomorrow afternoon-Saturday).

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More primary texts

Hi everyone:
Here’s a link to an electronic book containing Henry Fielding’s essay “An Essay on the Knowledge of the Characters of Men”:

http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC03349159&id=HDromOmR3tMC&pg=RA3-PA279&lpg=RA3-PA279&dq=%22on+the+knowledge+of+the+characters+of+men%22&as_brr=1#PRA3-PA281,M1

Here are the Samuel Johnson links:

Life of Milton:
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/milton.html

Life of Savage:

http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/savage.html

Life of Cowley: [the third biography]:

http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=5098

Life of Pope:

http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/pope.html

Samuel Johnson’s Rambler 60:

http://www.samueljohnson.com/ram60.html

Samuel Johnson’s Idler 84:

http://newark.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Texts/idler84.html

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Relating to Robinson Crusoe

I was reading something today that made me think of the end of yesterday’s class. This is from an article by Christian T. Wolfe called “De-Ontologizing the Brain” (full version available here). The first quote that Wolfe uses is from cognitive scientist Andy Clark, the second is from mega-awesome literary critic N. Katherine Hayles:

“[The plasticity of the human brain] implies in turn a surprising degree of opportunitic openness towards the non-organic, the artificial, the technological: the biological functioning of our brain themelves ‘has always involved [using] nonbiological props and scaffolds,’ with direct consequences for brain architecture itself: ‘a youngster growing up in a medieval village in twelfth-century France would literally have different neural connections than a twenty-first century American adolescent who has spent serious time with computer games.’ In Deleuze’s terms, ‘Creating new circuits in art means creating them in the brain.’”

We got into a small discussion about “relating” to Crusoe and Bunyan, and about whether or not Wordsworth was correct in asserting that anybody could relate to Robinson Crusoe (I don’t have Wordsworth’s text, so I’m not sure exactly how he phrased it). What the passage from Wolfe highlights, for me, is the imbrication of the relating (that is, reading) subject in a technologically and historically determined mode of reading. We have radically different ways of thinking of the third person, the past tense, etc. because we have access to new representational forms (film, video games, etc.) which inform our readings and, I would guess, our sense of what it means to “relate” to a fictional construct.

Not to get all cognitive sciencey, but, for me, anyway, it’s worth thinking about the dissonance between the anti-Cartesian reading subject (i.e. me, maybe you?) and the Cartesian object being-read (Robinson Crusoe) within the frame of a brain that understands the notion of “relating” in a completely different way than its 18th C. predecessors, that in face relates to the concept of “relating” in a totally different way.


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A nice Crusoe teaching resource

A good teaching resource for presenting the book to undergraduates is the multimedia website “Chasing Crusoe”–a collaboration between students at Chapel Hill and some visiting students from Chile. The website describes the island where Selkirk was marooned and compares it to the setting of Defoe’s novel. There’s a section which deals with “fact vs. fiction” and a great deal of good visual material to bring new readers into the novel.

http://www.rcrusoe.org/

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Friday Forum

This week’s Friday Forum looks interesting:

Please join the Early Modern Interdisciplinary Group for

“Foreign Encounters with Domestic Economies”
Kim Hall, Fordham University

Keynote address for
Strange Currencies: Dynamic Economies in the Early Modern World
The Third Annual Conference of the Early Modern Interdisciplinary Group

Friday February 16th, 4 pm
Segal Theatre
The Graduate Center, City University of New York
365 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10016

Co-sponsored by the English Department of the City University of New York, Graduate Center

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Time in Crusoe

It will interesting to compare the role of time in Crusoe to the telescoping of time in Grace Abounding.

Both narratives have an extremely interior feel to me, despite Crusoe’s busy manipulation of the island…I find that time is hard to keep track of in Defoe just as it is in Bunyan’s book.

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