Reviews

Garrett Stewart. Novel Violence: A Narratography of Victorian Fiction. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009. ISBN: 978-0-226-77458-9. Price: US$45.00[Notice]

  • Peter K. Garrett

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  • Peter K. Garrett
    University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

At the end of his final chapter Garrett Stewart remarks on Hardy’s refusal in Tess of the D’Urberviles (1891) to claim any redemptive meaning for the violent sacrifice of his heroine. Instead, “what is saving in Hardy is the difficulty of skimming . . . the need, so often, to reread his very sentences to get either their exact picture or their point” (219). Novel Violence is itself dedicated to making skimming difficult, both in the intricate density, sometimes even obscurity, of its own writing and in its insistence on slowing the pace of reading by attending to small-scale aberrations of syntax, figuration, sound effects of alliteration and assonance, or the sort of phonetic ambiguity that marks the moment of the villain’s violent annihilation in Dombey and Son (1846-48), as the doomed Carker “uttered a shriek—looked round—saw the red eyes [of the approaching train] close upon him . . .” (7). (Stewart’s italics, a frequent tactic, here used to underline the double sound and sense of S/Z, adjective/verb.) Dwelling or stumbling on such effects retards any straightforward reading for the plot with the resistance of “prose friction.” Stewart has been a perceptive and ingenious reader of minute details throughout his distinguished career as a critic of nineteenth-century British fiction, as well as in his studies of film and painting. Now, in addition to scrutinizing four major Victorian novels, he also strenuously theorizes this microstylistic approach as “narratography,” setting it in dialogue with the macropoetics of structuralist narratology and the genre theories of Ian Watt, Michael McKeon, and especially Georg Lukács. Three sections, 20% of the book, as well as lengthy footnotes and theoretical excursions within the other chapters, are devoted to these issues. Stewart proposes his sort of “novel criticism as media study,” working into the fine grain of the linguistic medium, as a methodological alternative to new historicism and cultural studies, but for reasons I’ll return to, his book is unlikely to exert the sort of influence he hopes for (220). However we take his theoretical claims, Stewart’s readings of his chosen texts are always original and striking. Little Dorrit (1855-57) assumes a different shape when read for its “omitted person plot,” the missing story of Arthur Clennam’s actual mother, whose existence is briefly mentioned only in the novel’s jumbled denouement. Stewart fills this lacuna with an imagined prequel like those recently manufactured for many other Victorian novels, a device that is both witty and illuminating as a gloss on the foreshortened syntax of the final paragraph, which assimilates Arthur to the mothering role played by Amy Dorrit: “not being able to love the mother, or mourn her, the son has become her” (49). A similar shift of perspective displaces the melodrama of Anne Brontë’s The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848), where Stewart’s focus on the exchanged journal and letters by which the story is framed discloses another process of transference, one that reflects the novel’s commercial and libidinal transactions with its audience: “Brontë is narrating the story of fictional impact itself” (100). The chapters on The Mill on the Floss (1860) and Tess of the D’Urbervilles grow more ambitious, largely through Stewart’s greater use of Lukács’s Hegelian idiom to link small-scale features with large generalities about temporality in the nineteenth-century “novel of disillusionment” and the relations of form and force. Registering the forward thrust and lateral disturbances of the linguistic medium, “narratography is a reading of form for its own temporal force” (169). But here the limitations of Stewart’s approach become more troubling. The violent deaths of Maggie Tulliver and Tess Durbeyfield amplify the earlier sufferings of Helen …

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