Monday, 15 April 2024

What is Literature? An Interloper’s view

 I say drop a mouse into a poem

and watch him probe his way out,

or walk inside the poem's room

and feel the walls for a light switch.

                                 Billy Collins, Introduction to Poetry

 

         There is nothing called literature. What exists is a type of writing called literary writing that can be found in other media that may not be considered literature. But what does being literary mean? Is it a distinct style that needs to be adopted by the author? But different types of writing – journalistic pieces, poems, historical accounts, sociological theories – have their own motives and hence their own styles. Then how do we define a quality called literary that could be common to the various types of writing that we encounter?

         The first and foremost quality of literary writing is the primacy of description over narration. These are two interdependent elements of any piece of writing that seeks to tell a story in the broader sense of the term. Description freezes a moment in time while narration moves the story forward. Take the following lins from Thomas Hardy’s Under The Greenwood Tree :

To dwellers in a wood almost every species of tree has its voice as well as its feature. At the passing of the breeze the fir-trees sob and moan no less distinctly than they rock; the holly whistles as it battles with itself; the ash hisses amid its quiverings; the beech rustles while its flat boughs rise and fall. And winter, which modifies the note of such trees as they shed their leaves, does not destroy their individuality.

On a cold and starry Christmas-eve within living memory a man was passing up a lane towards Mellstock Cross in the darkness of a plantation that whispered thus distinctively to his intelligence.

The first paragraph is a meditation on different species of trees found in the region. The plot is yet to unfold (or may be, in other instances, does not move forward even if it has already unfolded) and the reader is invited to appreciate the image brought alive by the description. There is neither chronology nor event but words that concretize the image called up by the intricate play between word and matter.

But the second paragraph means business. A man moves through the landscape and with him, the reader. The narration unfolds; the plot is no longer held back by words. Yet the quiescence of the first paragraph seeps into the second and briefly arrests its movement “in the darkness of a plantation that whispered thus distinctively to his intelligence.”

Narration is never completely free from description, at least in good literature. And it is primarily description that constitutes the type of writing known as literature.  

Description is achieved by the specific way in which a litterateur deals with language. In non-literary writing, a cry of loneliness is a sign of the loneliness which provokes it, but literature about loneliness is both loneliness itself and something other than loneliness. The conversion of emotion into literature causes a transmutation that extricates literature from the despondency of the lonely state. The reader appreciates literature on loneliness without being drowned in the state of loneliness. He would never want to be in such a state himself but nonetheless appreciates the literature provoked by such a state. This appreciation of an undesired state of being is the something other created by literature. 

 

           

          

 

What is Literature? An Interloper’s view

  I say drop a mouse into a poem and watch him probe his way out, or walk inside the poem's room and feel the walls for a light switc...