Realism Flashcards
Realism
Characteristics (7)
- Impact of modernization and technology in everyday life.
- Symbolic mark of success (house, car, television, home appliances)
- Main theme: loneliness
- Faceless corporate man (“The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit”, Sloan Wilson)
- Generalized American alienation (“The Lonely Crowd”, David Riesman)
FICTION RESPONDING TO ALIENATION
- Subtle and pervasive unease.
- stress lurking in the shadows of seeming satisfaction (O’Hara, Cheever, Updike)
- Portray men who fail in the struggle to succeed.
“Death of a Salesman”, Arthur Miller
“Seize the Day”, Saul Bellow - Racism as a continuing undercurrent
“A Raisin in the Sun”, Lorraine Hansberry
Realism
John Updike
Characteristics (3)
- Novels and stories turn him into the most significant transcriber/creator of “middleness” in American writing.
- “The Dogwood Tree: A Boyhood”
- Plot: falling in love in high school, meeting a college roommate, going to the eye doctor or dentist, eating supper on Sunday night…
Realism
John Updike
Rabbit Tetralogy
- Harry Angstrom: ordinariness + Kierkegaardian angst
- Dreams of success and personal fulfillment never quite realized.
- Disappointed but never defeated.
“Rabbit, Run
- Mirror of 1950s: Anmstrong = aimless, disaffected young husband.
- Trying to escape from his own town, job, wife…
- Alienated young man
- Spiritual-quest novel couche in an urbane critique of 1950s conformism and inauthenticity.
“Rabbit Redux”
- Counterculture of 1960s: Anmstrong still without a clear goal or purpose, no escape from the banal.
“Rabbit is rich”
- 1970s: Anmstrong = prosperous businessman, Vietnam era.
“Rabbit at rest”
- 1980s: Anmstrong’s reconciliation with life before dying from a heart attack.
Realism
Raymond Carver
Characteristics (6)
- Recalls work of Hemingway
- Use of omission.
- Spaces between words to catch elusive feelings.
- Quiet stoicism.
- Packed fiction.
- Link to “Dirty Realism”
- Characters usually working-class, somewhat down on their luck.
- Alcohol as a further depressant.
- Failures = hopes ( small, even puny)
- Plain, simple manner sticking to the absolute minimum.
- Weariness + wonder
-Acknowledgement of sheer grind and cruelty of life.- Occasional moment of relief, revelation, awareness of possibility.
- Complexities of action and motive + artful in the suggestion of repressed violence.
“A Small Good Thing”
“Neighbors” (freedom, escape, curiosity, control, voyeurism)
Realism
Richard Yates
Characteristics (5)
- “Age of Anxiety”
- Influences: Raymond Carver, Richard Ford
- Harsh reality.
- Interested in failures, rather than success.
- Lonely people, outsiders,rejected, striving to become someone else. - Realism out of time.
Realism
Richard Yates
“Revolutionary Road”
- Suburban staleness that defeats a young couple.
- Between romanticism of Fitzgerald and mordancy of Cheever.
- New mode of emasculated male identity.
- Suburbs = ideological defense against Communist enemy + showroom for American prosperity and technological progress.
- Frank Wheeler: archetypal Cold War suburban male.
- April struggles with role of contended suburban housewife/organizational wife.
- Themes: struggle to overcome isolation, gender roles, mental illness, dreams vs reality…
Realism
Richard Yates
“Eleven Kinds of Loneliness”
“A Really Good Jazz Piano”
“Eleven Kinds of Loneliness”
- Characters: cab drivers, schoolteachers, secretaries, soldiers…
- Insignificant, unspectacular, recognizably human in traditional realist mode.
“A Really Good Jazz Piano”
- Ken Platt, Carson Wyler