Naturalism in American Literature
For a much more extensive description than appears
on this brief page, see the works listed in the naturalism
bibliography and the bibliographies on Frank
Norris and Stephen
Crane.
Definitions |
The term naturalism describes a type of
literature that attempts to apply scientific principles of objectivity
and detachment to its study of human beings. Unlike realism, which focuses
on literary technique, naturalism implies a philosophical position: for
naturalistic writers, since human beings are, in Emile Zola's phrase, "human
beasts," characters can be studied through their relationships to their
surroundings. Zola's 1880 description of this method in Le roman experimental
(The Experimental Novel,
1880) follows Claude Bernard's medical
model and the historian Hippolyte Taine's observation that "virtue and
vice are products like vitriol and sugar"--that is, that human beings as
"products" should be studied impartially, without moralizing about their
natures. Other influences on American naturalists include Herbert Spencer
and Joseph LeConte.
Through this objective study of human beings,
naturalistic writers believed that the laws behind the forces that govern
human lives might be studied and understood. Naturalistic writers thus
used a version of the scientific method to write their novels; they studied
human beings governed by their instincts and passions as well as the ways
in which the characters' lives were governed by forces of heredity and
environment. Although they used the techniques of accumulating detail pioneered
by the realists,
the naturalists thus had a specific object in mind when they chose the
segment of reality that they wished to convey.
In George Becker's famous and much-annotated
and contested phrase, naturalism's philosophical framework can be simply
described as "pessimistic materialistic determinism." Another such concise
definition appears in the introduction to American Realism: New Essays.
In
that piece,"The Country of the Blue," Eric Sundquist comments, "Revelling
in the extraordinary, the excessive, and the grotesque in order to reveal
the immutable bestiality of Man in Nature, naturalism dramatizes the loss
of individuality at a physiological level by making a Calvinism without
God its determining order and violent death its utopia" (13).
A modified definition appears in Donald Pizer's Realism
and Naturalism in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction, Revised Edition
(1984):
[T]he naturalistic novel usually contains two
tensions or contradictions, and . . . the two in conjunction comprise both
an interpretation of experience and a particular aesthetic recreation of
experience. In other words, the two constitute the theme and form of the
naturalistic novel. The first tension is that between the subject matter
of the naturalistic novel and the concept of man which emerges from this
subject matter. The naturalist populates his novel primarily from the lower
middle class or the lower class. . . . His fictional world is that of the
commonplace and unheroic in which life would seem to be chiefly the dull
round of daily existence, as we ourselves usually conceive of our lives.
But the naturalist discovers in this world those qualities of man usually
associated with the heroic or adventurous, such as acts of violence and
passion which involve sexual adventure or bodily strength and which culminate
in desperate moments and violent death. A naturalistic novel is thus an
extension of realism only in the sense that both modes often deal with
the local and contemporary. The naturalist, however, discovers in this
material the extraordinary and excessive in human nature.
The second tension involves the theme of the naturalistic
novel. The naturalist often describes his characters as though they are
conditioned and controlled by environment, heredity, instinct, or chance.
But he also suggests a compensating humanistic value in his characters
or their fates which affirms the significance of the individual and of
his life. The tension here is that between the naturalist's desire to represent
in fiction the new, discomfiting truths which he has found in the ideas
and life of his late nineteenth-century world, and also his desire to find
some meaning in experience which reasserts the validity of the human enterprise.
(10-11)
For further definitions, see also The Cambridge
Guide to American Realism and Naturalism, Charles Child Walcutt's
American Literary Naturalism: A Divided Stream, June Howard's Form
and History in American Literary Naturalism, Walter Benn Michaels's
The Gold Standard and the Logic of Naturalism, Lee Clark Mitchell's
Determined
Fictions, Mark Selzer's Bodies and Machines, and other works
from the naturalism
bibliography. See Lars Ahnebrink, Richard Lehan, and Louis J. Budd
for information on the intellectual European and American backgrounds of
naturalism. |
Characteristics |
Characters. Frequently but not invariably ill-educated
or lower-class characters whose lives are governed by the forces of heredity,
instinct, and passion. Their attempts at exercising free will or choice
are hamstrung by forces beyond their control; social Darwinism and other
theories help to explain their fates to the reader. See June Howard's Form
and History for information on the spectator in naturalism.
Setting. Frequently an urban setting, as in
Norris's
McTeague.
See Lee Clark Mitchell's Determined Fictions, Philip Fisher's
Hard Facts, and James R. Giles's The Naturalistic Inner-City Novel
in America.
Techniques and plots. Walcutt says that the naturalistic
novel offers "clinical, panoramic, slice-of-life" drama that is often a
"chronicle of despair" (21). The novel of degeneration--Zola's
L'Assommoir
and
Norris's Vandover and the Brute, for example--is also a common type. |
Themes |
1.Walcutt identifies survival, determinism, violence,
and taboo as key themes.
2. The "brute within" each individual, composed
of strong and often warring emotions: passions, such as lust, greed, or
the desire for dominance or pleasure; and the fight for survival in an
amoral, indifferent universe. The conflict in naturalistic novels is often
"man against nature" or "man against himself" as characters struggle to
retain a "veneer of civilization" despite external pressures that threaten
to release the "brute within."
3. Nature as an indifferent force acting on the
lives of human beings. The romantic vision of Wordsworth--that "nature
never did betray the heart that loved her"--here becomes Stephen Crane's
view in "The Open Boat": "This tower was a giant, standing with its back
to the plight of the ants. It represented in a degree, to the correspondent,
the serenity of nature amid the struggles of the individual--nature in
the wind, and nature in the vision of men. She did not seem cruel to him
then, nor beneficent, nor treacherous, nor wise. But she was indifferent,
flatly indifferent."
4. The forces of heredity and environment as they
affect--and afflict--individual lives.
5. An indifferent, deterministic universe. Naturalistic
texts often describe the futile attempts of human beings to exercise free
will, often ironically presented, in this universe that reveals free will
as an illusion. |
Practitioners |
Frank
Norris
Theodore
Dreiser
Jack
London
Stephen
Crane
Edith
Wharton, The House of Mirth (1905)
Ellen
Glasgow,Barren Ground (1925) (
John Dos Passos (1896-1970), U.S.A. trilogy (1938):
The
42nd Parallel
(1930), 1919 (1932), andThe Big Money
(1936)
James T. Farrell (1904-1979), Studs Lonigan
(1934)
John Steinbeck (1902-1968), The Grapes of
Wrath (1939)
Richard
Wright, Native Son (1940), Black Boy (1945)
Norman Mailer (1923-2007), The Naked and the
Dead (1948)
William Styron, Lie Down in Darkness (1951)
Saul Bellow, The Adventures of Augie March
(1953)
Other writers sometimes identified as naturalists:
Nelson Algren, The Man with the Golden Arm
Sherwood Anderson, Winesburg, Ohio (1919)
Harriet Arnow, The Dollmaker (1954)
Ambrose Bierce
Abraham Cahan, The Making of an American Citizen
Kate Chopin, The Awakening
Rebecca Harding Davis
Don DeLillo
Paul Laurence Dunbar, The Sport of the Gods
Edward Eggleston, The Hoosier School-Master
William Faulkner
Harold Frederic, The Damnation of Theron Ware (1896)
Henry Blake Fuller, The Cliff-Dwellers
Hamlin Garland, Rose of Dutcher's Coolly
Robert Herrick, The Memoirs of an American Citizen (1905)
Ernest Hemingway
E. W. Howe, The Story of a Country Town
Joseph Kirkland,
Joyce Carol Oates
David Graham Phillips
Hubert Selby, Jr.
Upton Sinclair, The Jungle
|
Stephen Crane on Nature and the Universe |
When it occurs to a man that nature does not
regard him as important, and that she feels she would not maim the universe
by disposing of him, he at first wishes to throw bricks at the temple,
and he hates deeply the fact that there are no bricks and no temples.
--Stephen Crane, "The Open Boat"
A man said to the universe:
"Sir, I exist!"
"However," replied the universe,
"The fact has not created in me
A sense of obligation." --Stephen Crane (1894,
1899) |
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