Friday, 8 June 2012

Northrop Frye in Context by Diane Dubois



In August 2011 I travelled to Oxford and Gloucestershire with Diane Dubois to photograph a series of pictures for the cover of a book she was writing on the Shakespeare critic Northrop Frye (1912-91).  Frye’s writing concerns itself with the theory and practice of literary criticism. He was among the first to interpret the poetry of William Blake and is often considered to be one of the most influential literary critics and theorists of the 20th Century. Fellow Canadian Marshall McLuhan once said of Frye: “Norrie is not struggling for his place in the sun. He is the sun.”

The photographs are of the stained glass West Window of St. Mary’s Church in Fairford, Gloucestershire, built in 1490. The place we visited and photographed had a significant influence on Frye according to Diane Dubois. In her essay “The Absurd Imagination: Northrop Frye and Waiting for Godot,” Dubois suggests that “the architonic that informs the 'Theory of Myths' may have been influenced by Frye’s chance encounter with a stained glass window in a church near Oxford, where Frye was a postgraduate student from 1936 to 1938” (Dubois, 2011, p.122). Frye and a group of friends visited the church in 1937, when he saw St. Mary’s West Window, a depiction of the Last Judgement. This provided Frye “with a practical example of Emile Mâle’s book on the iconography of French Cathedrals, The Gothic Image: Religious Art in France in the 13th Century (1913)” (ibid).  He read the book prior to attending Oxford, while he was a divinity student. The book “provided an initiation for Frye into the levels of meaning to be found in medieval architecture” (ibid). These levels of meaning, Dubois argues, “adumbrate Frye’s 'Theory of Modes', the first essay in the Anatomy [of Criticism]” (ibid).  The five modes are identified by Frye as “the mythic, the romantic, the high mimetic, the low mimetic, and the ironic” (ibid).  





Diane Dubois goes on to describe the West Window of St. Mary’s:

The top of St. Mary’s West Window is flooded with the golden light of heaven. The colour red predominates in the bottom right hand corner, as this is where the 'harrowing of hell' is depicted. In the bottom left, souls, rescued from hell, ascend a shining staircase. The window is thus an architectural rendering of salvation. To Frye, it may have suggested the shape of the architectonic that would inform the Anatomy. His biographer seems to think so: Ayre describes this visit to St. Mary’s as “a revelation” for the young Frye (Ayre 141). Tragedy coincides with hell at the bottom of the window, and heaven at the top equates with romance. Irony/satire find their counterpart with the right-hand side of the window, where the damned slide into hell, and comedy with the lifting out of hell and into paradise.
(ibid, pp. 122-123)

The book has recently been published by Cambridge Scholars. The Canadian poet, literary scholar and  historian Jonathan Hart has written the back cover blurb. I have included his words here:

Diane Dubois takes a contextual approach to Northrop Frye's work and claims that it is best assessed in relation to his biographical circumstances. In context and in specific details, Dubois' book seeks to illuminate Frye's oeuvre as a personal, lifelong project. This volume successfully situates Frye's work within the social, political, religious and philosophical conditions of the time and place of conception and writing. Dubois ranges from Frye's critical utopia and views on criticism and education through the university, church and William Blake to politics and the Canadian and academic milieu. This book, which is particularly good at tracing Frye's academic influences and his roots in Methodism and Canada, will have a strong appeal to an international audience of general readers, students, teachers and specialists. Frye is a key figure in the cultural and literary theory of the twentieth century, and Dubois' accomplished discussion helps us to see his work anew.

Jonathan Hart teaches at University of Alberta and is author of Northrop Frye: The Theoretical Imagination (1994), Interpreting Cultures (2006), Empires and Colonies (2008) and Literature, Theory, History (2011).

The author, Dr Diane Dubois is a veteran of the Edinburgh Fringe, as an actor, playwright and critic. She has written for the stage outside of the festival and for radio. She is currently Programme Leader of the MA in Playwriting and Script Development at the University of Lincoln, UK. She wrote the university's first Drama degree, thus founding the Lincoln School of Performing Arts in 2003. From 1999 to 2008 she was editor of the Journal of Gender Studies. Her recent publications include “Out of the Parlour and into the Centre: Studying Women's Contribution to English Modernist Theatre and Drama,” in Origins of English Dramatic Modernism (2010). Diane did her PhD at the University of Hull, taking as her subject the work of her fellow Canadian, Northrop Frye.

Sources:

Ayre, John (1989) Northrop Frye: A Biography Toronto: Random.

Cambridge Scholars: http://www.c-s-p.org/Flyers/Northrop-Frye-in-Context1-4438-3356-8.htm

Dubois, Diane (2011) “The Absurd Imagination: Northrop Frye and Waiting for Godot”, English Studies in Canada Volume 37 Issue 2, June 2011 pp. 111-130. 

Dubois, Diane (2012) Northrop Frye in Context,  Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars: http://www.c-s-p.org/Flyers/978-1-4438-3356-1-sample.pdf

Tuesday, 28 February 2012

Friday, 10 February 2012

Sorry for the lack of Postings

Hi Fellow Bloggers and Blog Readers,


Sorry about the lack of posts, I have been extremely busy. I have graduated with an MA and have been busy teaching.


I will hopefully re-join the blogospheare  soon.


All the very best
John

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Five Photographers from Lincoln


Five Photographers from Lincoln showcases recent work from a diverse group of emerging photographic artists covering subject matter ranging from the explosive destruction of novelty decorative items, exploratory regional documentary, abstract landscape and cityscape and experimental portraiture.

Contributing Artists: Mike Downing, Michelle Walsh, Graham Cooper, Mark Terry and John Hudson.

Located at the Seven Dials club in London’s Covent Garden, for more information on opening hours, location and facilities please check the ‘Venue’ page.


Five Photographers From Lincoln: http://lincolnfive.com/
5th of December 2011 for one month until the 5th of January 2012, Monday
- Wednesday 12:00 - 22:00 Thursday - Saturday  12:00 - 23:00 Sunday -
Closed

Seven Dials Club
Covent Garden Community Centre
42 Earlham St
WC2H 9LA

Seven Dials Club: www.sevendialsclub.com/
Contact:  Seven Dials 020 7681 8217

Friday, 11 November 2011

The Shock of the New 2: The Powers that Be





At the end of the first episode and chapter of Robert Hughes’ Shock of the New, we are told that “The Mechanical Paradise” that modernism promised “would soon be less evident.  After 1914”, Hughes explains “machinery was turned on its inventors and their children. After forty years of continuous peace in Europe, the worst war in history cancelled the faith in good technology, the benevolent machine. The myth of the Future went into shock and European art moved into its years of irony, disgust and protest (Hughes, 1991 p.56).
                The second episode “The powers that be” opens at the site of the Butte de Walencourt above the Somme Valley. In these places, Hughes explains, “our fathers and grandfathers tasted the first terrors of the 20th Century. There that joyful sense of the promise of modernity, the optimism born of the machine and of the millennial turning point of the new century, was cut down by other machines”   (Hughes, 1991 p.57).
                Art and language Hughes argues “could no longer carry its former meanings. World War I changed the life of words and images in art, radically and forever. It brought our culture into the age of mass-produced, industrialized death. This, at first, was indescribable” (p.56).  Total war until this time was basically beyond human experience and the naivety in which Europe entered the conflict was reflected in the propaganda that basically described the experience as somewhere between a joust and a cricket match.  More profound was the gap between experience and official language.  Those who had experienced grew aware that their leaders: the generals and politicians had lied about the war, its causes, its nature and length and the press had described very little of the realities of the conflict. A whole generation would be lost and traumatised. It was up to the artists and poets to challenge this official language and what separated them from official culture, was that that culture belonged to the elders. Some artists rejected authority and nationalism and the patriotism of their fathers. The children would become pacifists and internationalists and would seek a way out of the madness of the Great War and seek out exile.  The main haven for intellectuals in Europe was Zurich in neutral Switzerland.
The café was the natural home of the exiles and a very potent public sphere where many cultural, revolutionary and political ideas formed. In Zurich’s Café Odéon we saw Lenin plan that violent revolution in Russia, it was also the place where Cabaret Voltaire and Dada was born.  From here the revolutionary nature of art is explored from dada in Berlin to the constructivists in St Petersburg and Moscow. Of course both revolutionary art movements are doomed to fail as Stalinism and Nazism took hold and dismissed such things as degenerate or bourgeois and punished those artists who practised it with humiliation, exile, imprisonment or death. The idea of a revolutionary art linked to modernism does not disappear and certainly is not all liberal or left-wing.  Futurism was all patriotism and warmongering before and after World War I and became quite influential on the young Mussolini as he shifted his politics from socialism to something else.  Not long after he came to power Mussolini made futurism fascism’s first official style. Was there a difference, Hughes asks at one point, between Russian Agitprop art and photo-montage, cubo-futurism and futurists use of the same techniques? That other dictator, Hitler generally rejected modernism was favoured classicism and the work of Albert Speer. In the 1930s Mussolini would adopt classicism under Speer’s influence.    
Hughes compares Mussolini’s use of classicism and his architecture of state power with the “Architecture of Democracy”, with the scariest example being Albany Mall, the government building of New York State.  We have no architecture of freewill, Hughes declares!  As for the art of descent, we are left with Picasso’s Guernica and the remnants of the Dadaist strategies in the neo-dada of Jean Tinguely whom Hughes seems to dismiss as rather tame an un-revolutionary: harmless. Art then is out done by mass media and photography in their ability to morally influence the world: “it is hard to think of any work of art of which one can say, This saved the life of one Jew, one Vietnamese, one Cambodian. Specific books perhaps; but as far as one can tell, no paintings or sculptures. The difference between us and the artists of the 1920s is that they thought such a work of art could be made. Perhaps it was a certain naiveté that made them think so. But it is certainly  our loss that we cannot”  (Hughes, 1991 p.111).


Sources:
Hughes. R, (1991) The Shock of the New London: Thames and Hudson.

Friday, 16 September 2011

Digital Imaging and Photography MA Website

Thank you to Mike, Michelle, Graham, Sam and everyone else involved in the MA show.

 The MA website:


Saturday, 10 September 2011

Graduate Shows


My work and the work  of my fellow MA students feature in
Thank you Michelle!


Exhibitions:

Venue:

Ground Floor Gallery, Architecture Building,
University of Lincoln
Brayford Pool
Lincoln
LN6 7TS
  

Dates:

From: 21st September 2011
Until: 25th September 2011
9:00 am - 8:00 pm

Venue:

Seven Dials Club
42 Earlham Street
Covent Garden
London
WC2H 9LA
    

Dates:

From: 7th December 2011
Until: 5th January 2012
9:00 am - 10:00 pm