Comparison of A.S. Byatt and Thomas Hardy’s conflict of society and individual, Pt. 1.
The Game.
The purpose of this essay is to compare the
interpretation of Thomas Hardy’s novels that I have made in my 2024 blogs with interpretations
of more recent novels, namely those of A.S. Byatt. Byatt’s style reflects
Victorian prose with a contemporary sense of individual characters’
psychological transcendence of story. The importance of character, and the
contemporary interpretation of characters from past times (especially the emotional side of the
Victorian era) renders the novel’s forward momentum more complex and more under
the microscope than traditional formal views of structural writing.
For simplicity’s sake, I shall in this brief introduction
to the Hardy/Byatt comparison examine Byatt’s early novel The Game. Byatt’s
novel reflects the themes of individual in angst with society, and character
involvement with both the intellectual and the emotional. I find these these themes
have much in common with Milan Kundera’s exploration of The Art of the Novel
(19 ). Kundera’s emphasis on the
novel’s ability to convey multiple perspectives – a character’s need to
confront an oppressive society coupled with his/her need to declare their own
identity -- is echoed in Byatt’s
multilayered narrative techniques. Lisa Steiby examines Kundera’s
transformation of character determined by self versus society in “beyond
Modernity” in Kundera and Modernity, especially Chapter 10, “The End of
Modernity, the End of the Novel?” (207-226). Byatt frequently constructs her
novels with shifting points of view, alternating between historical and
contemporary perspectives, and between different characters’ inner lives. In The
Game, the historical perspective is the created world of “the game” the
sisters invented as children, a game that echoes themes from the Biblical Eden,
themes or good and evil as well as lust and purity.
The Game concerns two sisters. Julia is a novelist
who has married a robust figure of a fisherman named Thor. Incongruously, Julia
is the deterministic one of the two, a cynical rationalist, while Thor exhibits
total immersion in romantic emotionalism. In contrast to Julia is her sister
Cassandra, enthralled with a scientist, Simon, whose examination of biology is
totally rationalistic while Cassandra,
who, as a science lover, should be also that impersonal, cannot escape the
angst of emotion that she felt in her youth, largely due to the psychological
games she played with her sister.
My posts of 2024 interpreted Thomas Hardy’s novels The
Return of the Native and Jude the Obscure in terms postmodern ideas
of reader approach theory, especially that reminiscent of Sontag’s “Against
Interpretation” in which immediate feelings by the reader to the impact of the
text become the important aspect of the reading experience. This reader’s
impact confirms the “absence” of the author theory of Roland Barthes that
influenced Sontag. Barthes writes, “There is supposed to be a mystique of the
text. – On the contrary, the whole effort consists in materializing the
pleasure of the text” (58). Thus, the author’s mystical purpose becomes
secondary ot the reader’s immediate pleasure. Applying the sense of immediacy
to the reading of classic deterministic novels such as Hardy’s makes the reader
question the sense of fatalism that Hardy shows society has over the
individual. For if the individual is the important thing about interpretation,
then the individual and their role of self-determination, no matter how small
and/or ineffective it may be, stand out as the important interpretation of the
novel.
While
Hardy, a 19th-century novelist and poet, is often associated with his tragic
portrayals of rural life and the struggles of individuals against societal
forces, A.S. Byatt, a contemporary novelist, engages with history, myth, and
complex psychological portraits of characters. In The Game Byatt posits
a man confronting a woman as a herpetologist with subliminal sexuality, a
scientist specializing in snakes. The woman is one of two sisters who create
the contrast in theme in The Game. The meeting between this first
sister, Julia, and the herpetologist is virtual, her watching him on videotape.
The meeting is nonetheless suggestive of an emotional Garden of Eden scenario
wherein she is tempted by him as he holds his snake and bemoans the fact that
the natural world does not cherish the snake but is repulsed by it. (13-15)
Byatt here
chooses to write on Chastity, the decision to refrain from physical passion – she
questions the ability of the individual to retain a purity of the spirit,
“uninvaded and complete”?
“We shall
do better…to think of chastity as purity, a scrupulous purity, and to associate
it with innocence, if we are to apprehend at all the moral force either of
Lancelot’s sin or of Galahad’s virtue…,” and “We shall do better if we think of
‘that which the maiden would never have again’ as an original innocence.”(16)
Julia (on pages 13-15) is confronted
with symbols of sexuality that she posits from a scientific situation (sexual
only in a blatantly unemotional type of way) contrasted with another situation
of rhapsody about Chastity (p. 16). This confrontation of the sexual and the
chaste concerns much of Byatt’s writing about the human condition. The reading
of sexual situations into science and the miasmic meanderings about whether or
not to remain chaste in the emotional life provide a stark contrast in human
life in Byatt’s presentation of it.
But the other sister, Cassandra, comes forward in
the narrative. The serpent plays a significant role in both sisters’
worldviews. Cassandra revels in the poetry of the serpent, ascribing to it many
layers of symbol. Cassandra revels in the words of a professor as he describes
the snake: “They are worshipped in association with running water and with
lightning. As a symbol—for the life, the life that drives us” (22). Also, “The people here tell me that during
the night the anaconda changes into a dark boat with white sails, and skims
over the swamp….I don’t know whether the wings and sails turn the creature into
a ship of death, or a more ambiguous symbol of some kind of release from the
earth” (22).
In The Game, the reader views the Eden
symbolism that obsesses the sisters, making them create complex relationships
with their romantic and scientific partners. Society denies the sisters the
openness in which to pursue this symbolism, so they do so in secret in the
guise of a created “game.” Despite their different historical contexts, both Hardy
and Byatt explore themes of fate, the tension between individual desire and
societal constraints, and the complexities of human relationships.
__________
References
Barthe, Roland. The Pleasure of
the Text. Richard Miller trans., Farrar, Straus, & Giroux., 1975.
Byatt, A.S. The Game. Random
House, 1967.
Kundera, Milan. The Art of the Novel. [1986] trans. by
Linda Asher [1988], Harper, 2000.
Sontag, Susan. “Against
Interpretation.” The Susan Sontag Reader edited
by Elizabeth Hardwick, New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1984, pp. 95-104.
Steiby, Lisa. Kundera and Modernity.
Purdue UP. ebook Academic Collection (EBSOhost), Comparative Cultural
Studies, 2013. Accessed Feb. 2025.
Nicholas Harris
Blog. March
1, 2025.