This dissertation reconfigures the origins of the
modernist conception of stream-of-consciousness subjectivity by linking
its form to the emergence of a mystical element within the opaque
epistemology of the mind. Beginning as early as the mid-nineteenth
century, this narrative mysticism becomes apparent in the novels of
George Eliot, whose fiction is fundamentally informed by the expanding
discourse of spiritual, psychical, and psychological concerns that
proceed to successively occupy such intellectuals as F. W. H. Myers,
William James, Evelyn Underhill, and Sigmund Freud in the wake of
Darwin's publication of The Origin of Species. I begin my study
with an examination of the realist fiction of George Eliot, in an effort
to locate traces of mystical elements in the narrative of Victorian
fiction, which has traditionally been deemed on the other side of the
epoch divide from modernist literature. My aim is to propose an opening
between these two disciplinary fields of literary studies, in which I
can situate my argument and reconfigure the origins of the modernist
conception of stream-of-consciousness subjectivity.
As the
central concern of my study, I examine the converging influences of
mysticism and the mind, or individual consciousness, on the varieties of
subjectivity discernable in modernist fiction. I argue that a broadly
conceived interest in the mystical as both a spiritual and psychical
construct becomes a preoccupation of modernist fiction that is notably
evident within the work of Dorothy Richardson, James Joyce, and Samuel
Beckett, leading to each author's various interpretations of an
experimental narrative aesthetic - a variety of subjectivity - that
arguably destabilizes the idea of a coherent self. Expanding the
discourse surrounding modernism's fascination with materiality to
include the cognitive insights offered by the mystical tradition allows
for both a (re)placing of spiritual transcendence alongside the
materialist contributions of fin de siècle psychology, and a
(re)visioning of spirituality's uncanny situatedness within
twentieth-century fiction - this latter point is explored within the
late twentieth century fiction of Michael Ondaatje, as a coda to this
study.
Situating the origins of stream of consciousness
subjectivity within a larger cultural milieu is, I acknowledge, nothing
new to the field of modernist studies. However, what I propose is new
because other critics of modernism have neglected to align the earlier fin de siècle
mania for mysticism, in both its secular and religious contexts, with
the larger movement of literature towards innovations in narrative form
that were - and still are - predicated on evolving explications of the
self and the mind. Most studies of mysticism seek to explicate its
interrelationship with the types of spiritualist practices that
developed such a popular following from the mid-nineteenth through the
early twentieth century, such as table-rapping, mesmerism, mediumship,
séances, and astral travel. There are also a number of scholars who have
explored the mystical as a general category of spiritualist practices
historically deemed in some way aberrant (medically), irrational
(philosophically), and/or subversive of traditional Christian teachings.
Also, as a specific autobiographical genre, the mystic text has
attracted writers and readers for centuries, even beyond the specific
example of Saint Teresa of Avila, whose writings are still in print and
immensely popular. She serves as an apt paradigm of support for my
reading of Miriam Henderson and Molly Bloom as mystically modernist
characters, since they too can be interpreted as reluctant participants
in the author's new way of looking at the world.
From a
philosophical viewpoint, and as an important element of medieval
writings, mysticism has been a consistent topic of critical study. In
contrast, the mystical novel, while rarely a pure form, is, according to
Iris Murdoch, representative of man's "attempt to express a religious
consciousness without the traditional trappings of religion…and reflects
the uneasy suspicion that perhaps after all man is not God. One might
connect this with our gradually changing consciousness of science
[which] today is more likely to make us anxious than to make us proud" (Existentialists
225-6). Clearly, those who dabble in mysticism and its writings occupy
an ambiguous space in terms of religious identity. Whether it is the
avowed agnosticism of George Eliot, the self-imposed exile from Ireland
(land of perpetual religious strife) of James Joyce and Samuel Beckett,
or the open-minded pantheism of Dorothy Richardson, modernists sought
their own piety outside of orthodox boundaries. Like the ambiguity
surrounding these writers' reactions to the increasing alienation and
materialism of the twentieth century world, the mystical modernists I
study were of two minds: one undeniably tethered to the external,
physical world, and one periodically glimpsing the transcendent universe
through the mysterious medium of the mind.