perception and the mimetic mode in the novels of balzac and robbe-grillet

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This article was downloaded by: [University of Iowa Libraries] On: 16 March 2015, At: 11:25 Publisher: Routledge Informa Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954 Registered office: Mortimer House, 37-41 Mortimer Street, London W1T 3JH, UK Kentucky Romance Quarterly Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/vzrq20 Spatial Perception and the Mimetic Mode in the Novels of Balzac and Robbe-Grillet John A. Fleming a a University of Toronto Published online: 09 Jul 2010. To cite this article: John A. Fleming (1977) Spatial Perception and the Mimetic Mode in the Novels of Balzac and Robbe-Grillet, Kentucky Romance Quarterly, 24:2, 209-219, DOI: 10.1080/03648664.1977.9928141 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03648664.1977.9928141 PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE Taylor & Francis makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all the information (the “Content”) contained in the publications on our platform. However, Taylor & Francis, our agents, and our licensors make no representations or warranties whatsoever as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability for any purpose of the Content. Any opinions and views expressed in this publication are the opinions and views of the authors, and are not the views of or endorsed by Taylor & Francis. The accuracy of the Content should not be relied upon and should be independently verified with primary sources of information. Taylor and Francis shall not be liable for any losses, actions, claims, proceedings, demands, costs, expenses, damages, and other liabilities whatsoever or howsoever caused arising directly or indirectly in connection with, in relation to or arising out of the use of the Content.

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  • This article was downloaded by: [University of Iowa Libraries]On: 16 March 2015, At: 11:25Publisher: RoutledgeInforma Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954Registered office: Mortimer House, 37-41 Mortimer Street, London W1T 3JH,UK

    Kentucky Romance QuarterlyPublication details, including instructions forauthors and subscription information:http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/vzrq20

    Spatial Perception and theMimetic Mode in the Novels ofBalzac and Robbe-GrilletJohn A. Fleming aa University of TorontoPublished online: 09 Jul 2010.

    To cite this article: John A. Fleming (1977) Spatial Perception and the MimeticMode in the Novels of Balzac and Robbe-Grillet, Kentucky Romance Quarterly, 24:2,209-219, DOI: 10.1080/03648664.1977.9928141

    To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03648664.1977.9928141

    PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE

    Taylor & Francis makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all theinformation (the Content) contained in the publications on our platform.However, Taylor & Francis, our agents, and our licensors make norepresentations or warranties whatsoever as to the accuracy, completeness,or suitability for any purpose of the Content. Any opinions and viewsexpressed in this publication are the opinions and views of the authors, andare not the views of or endorsed by Taylor & Francis. The accuracy of theContent should not be relied upon and should be independently verified withprimary sources of information. Taylor and Francis shall not be liable for anylosses, actions, claims, proceedings, demands, costs, expenses, damages,and other liabilities whatsoever or howsoever caused arising directly orindirectly in connection with, in relation to or arising out of the use of theContent.

  • This article may be used for research, teaching, and private study purposes.Any substantial or systematic reproduction, redistribution, reselling, loan,sub-licensing, systematic supply, or distribution in any form to anyone isexpressly forbidden. Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found athttp://www.tandfonline.com/page/terms-and-conditions

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  • SPATIAL PERCEPTION AND THE MIMETIC MODE IN THE NOVELS OF BALZAC AND ROBBE-GRILLET

    John A. Fleming

    One of the difficulties for many readers of Balzac or Robbe-Grillet lies in the detailed and frequent description of the physical world to be found in the novels of both. Readers of Balzac have often skipped or skimmed these lengthy descriptions of setting while potential readers of Robbe-Grillet have sometimes rejected his novels altogether as unreadable. Such reactions suggest a misunderstanding of the nature and function of their respective uses of setting and call for some attempt a t explanation. At the same time a broader question also arises because most readers see that these two superficially similar uses of setting are in fact profoundly different although they have no very clear un- derstanding of this difference.

    It is my contention that a fundamentally opposite way of viewing the external world is at work in the novels of Balzac and Robbe-Grillet and that their in- dividual differences may be tied to certain generalized psychic conditions related to differing perceptions of space. If we as readers fail to respond to Balzacs descriptions of the physical world it is in part because his settings no longer correspond to the realities of contemporary perceptual experience, although paradoxically they may continue to satisfy our literary expectations. On the other hand if we find Robbe-Grillet unreadable it is because the physical universe as he describes it represents a radical new ordering of perceptual ex- perience which we have not as yet accepted, in the contemporary novel at least, conditioned as we are by the literary traditions of what may be called the mimetic and representational forms of the nineteenth century.

    Although Balzac and Robbe-Grillet both use the physical universe extensive- ly in their creation of. a particularized fictional world their conception of the physical setting and its relationship to man is entirely different. The declared at- titudes of both toward the physical world are too well known to require treat- ment here, but we should perhaps recall their basic positions before attempting any comparative study of what the texts themselves express.

    For Balzac the environment is an influence upon and a reflection of character. Toute sa personne explique la pension comme la pension implique sa personne he says of Mme Vauquer. Environment in a biological sense forms and motivates character; setting in a fictional sense explains to the reader what Grandet is and how he lives.

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  • 2 10 Kentucky Romance Quarterly

    Robbe-Grillet on the other hand feels that the physical world simply is. It has no significance in itself, although it is subject to that which man chooses to pro- ject upon it falsely: Or le monde nest ni signifiant. ni absurde. I I est tout simplement. . . .auteur de nous. defiant la meute de nos adjectifs animistes ou menagers, les choses sont 16. Leur surface est nette et lisse, intacte, sans eclat louche ni transparence.2 As a result the landscapes of Robbe-Gritlet present a neutral face to the reader. They neither explain character nor motivate action in the usual sense.

    These differing concepts of the physical world have important aesthetic con- sequences for the presentation and perception of the physical setting in the novels of Balzac and Robbe-Grillet. Since both rely heavily upon objective descriptive passages of great length and abundance a certain similiarity would seem to exist at first glance. Le Pdre Goriot begins in somewhat the same way as La Jalousie with the detailed description of a house. Yet our reactions to these two dwellings are immediately distinct. Before making any comparison however it would be useful to look more closely at two of Balzacs most famous houses, the Maison Vauquer and the Maison Grandet.

    In both cases we have an elaborate and detailed description spread over many pages and interspersed with other material. We see each house in characteristic detail, its position in the town, the quarter, the street. There is only one Maison Vauquer, one Maison Grandet, and the reader is constantly given the specifics of form and position necessary to establish this fact. The authenticity of both is guaranteed for u s by their precise location in geographic space and a catalogue of observable features. Balzac takes his distance upon raw experience in mimetic terms:

    La rnaison OG sexploite la pension bourgeoise appartient i Mrne Vauquer. Elle est situee dans le bas d e la rue Neuve-Saint-GeneviPve, i Iendroit od le terrain sabaisse vers la rue de IArbalhte par une pente si brusque et si rude que les chevaux la rnontent ou la descendent rarernent. . . .Nu1 quartier de Paris nest plus horrible, ni. disons-le, plus inconnu. La rue Neuve-Sainte-Genevihve surtout est cornrne u n cadre d e bronze, le seul qui convienne 2 ce r6cit. auquel on ne saurait trop preparer Iintelligence par des couleurs brunes. par des idees graves , .

    La facade d e la pension donne sur un jardinet. en sorte que la rnaison tornbe i angle droit sur la rue Neuve-Sainte-Genevisve. oii vous la voyez coup6e dans sa profondeur. Le long de cette facade. entre la rnaison et le jardinet. rBgne un cailloutis en cuvette. large dune toise devant lequel est une allee sabke. bordee d e geraniums. de lauriers-roses et de grenadiers plantes dans de grands vases en faience bleue et blanche.3

    Balzac is out to convince us of the actual existence in the real world of the Maison Vauquer and to make us feel through his description something of its inhabitants and their way of life. The same is true of Grandets dwelling. There is an appeal to both sense and sentiment:

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  • Spatial Perception and the Mimetic Mode 211

    I I se trouve dans certaines villes de province des maisons dont la vue inspire une melancolie 6gale 2 celle que provoque les cloitres les plus sombres. les landes les plus temes ou les ruines les plus tristes. Peut-&re y-a-t-il 2 la fois dans ces rnaisons et le silence du cloitre. et Iaridite des landes. et les ossements des ruines. . . .

    Ces principes de melancolie existent dans la physionomie dun logis sit& 2 Saumur. , .

    Eighteen pages later we have the faCade of the Maison Grandet described in detail as Grandet himself has been presented in the intervening space:

    Les trous in6gaux et nombreux que les intemgries du c h a t y avaient bizanernent pratiques donnaient au cintre et aux jambages de la baie Iapparence des pierres vermiculOes d e Iarchitecture franqaise et quelque ressemblance avec le porche d u n e geBle. Au-dessus du cintre r6gnait un long bas-relief d e pierre dure sculptee. representant les quatre Saisons. figures deji rongees et toutes noires. Ce bas-relief etait surmont6 dune plinthe saillante. sur laquelle selevaient plusieurs d e ces v6gktations dues au hasard, des pari6taires jaunes, des liserons, des convolvulus. du plantain, et un petit cerisier assez haut dej2.

    The Maison Vauquer and the Maison Grandet as well as their environs are seen not as simple visual forms but as qualified materially and sentimentally. Both are reflections not only of real places and presumably real structures, but of their owners as well. The melancholy and decay of the Maison Grandet find their cause in the nature of Grandet as Mme Vauquers boarding-house mirrors the coquetry and cheap display of the widow herself.

    At the same time these environments act upon the readers emotions to create a more general atmosphere coincident with the action of the two novels. They explain to the reader what is to follow, and prepare him psychologically and emotionally for the unfolding of a drama. Their function is to give per- spective internally, by situating the various elements of the narration within the frame of the novel, and externally, by the situation in historical time and space of verifiable points of reference. The reader finds himself ensconced at a certain angle and distance from what is to be told. However as details accumulate the natural model is rendered not necessarily in its reality but in its appearance, in other words, impressionistically. What we see is not as important as what we are meant to feel, hence the disorder of many of Balzacs descriptions: La rue Neuve-Sainte-Genevikve surtout est comme un cadre de bronze, le seul qui convienne 2 ce rQcit, auquel on ne saurait trop prQparer Iintelligence par des couleurs brunes, par des idQes graves. . . .

    Several techniques contribute to these impressionistic effects: the use of affective vocabulary (horrible, graves, mQlancolie. sombre, ternes, tristes, froid) ; figurative language and the anthropomorphization of objects (comme un cadre d e bronze. les ruines les plus tristes, les ossements des ruines, la physionomie dun logis); and finally visual color, red. rose, purple, green, blue, and white in the first instance, yellow, green, white and perhaps

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  • 212 Kentucky Romance Quarterly

    red in the second. Here sense perception carries with it an implicit value and emotion.

    Although the banana plantation in La Jalousie is also seen, the house described tells us little of its inhabitants. Nor does it have any typical significance as bourgeois boarding house or provincial manor. Stripped of all allusive values, it exists in its own time-space continuum, location unspecified, historically, geographically and chronologically adrift. Robbe-Grillet is not trying to convince us of its existence in the real world nor even trying to make us see it in the usual way, but using it, as we discover later, both to destroy our customary perceptions and to reveal indirectly the inner tensions of his narrator:

    Maintenant Iornbre du pilier-le pilier qui soutient Iangle sud-ouest du toit-divise en deux parties dgales Iangle correspondant de la terrasse. Cette terrasse est une large galerie couverte, entourant la rnaison sur trois de ses c6tds. Cornrne sa largeur est la rnerne dans la portion rnddiane et dans les branches latdrales, le trait dornbre projet6 par le pilier arrive exacternent au coin de la rnaison; rnais il sarrete Ib. car seules les dalles de la terrasse sont atteintes par le soleil. qui se trouve encore trop haut dans le ciel.

    Superficially the three passages cited are similar: each describes a concrete reality observed in some detail and with considerable precision. Yet this very precision is where Robbe-Grillet and Balzac diverge. Balzac accumulates, piling object upon object, detail upon detail, in a proliferation of qualities and values until he achieves a general effect. In contrast it is difficult to think of a single scene in Robbe-Grillets novels in which there is an abundance of objects or any implied value at ail. A few objects in an essentially simple scene are refined and dissected until the setting emerges not as characterized or impressionistically defined, but rather as a system of geometric functions. The geometric and situational language used at times by Balzac establishes objects in their external relations one to the other-Mme Vauquers boarding house is at such-and-such a spot on the rue Neuve-Sainte-Genevikve, the house is at right angles to the street, a sandy walkway parallels the faGade, and so forth. Above the arch of Grandets doorway there is a bas-relief surmounted by a protruding plinth . . . etc. Depth perspectives are thus established which coincide with Balzacs con- cept of character and plot. Robbe-Grillets backgrounds have no such function. The geometry of his descriptions remains mathematical, abstract and in the end non-representational. Normal perspective disappears as depth relations resolve themselves into surfaces and planes. The pillar at the south-west corner of the roof divides the corresponding angle of the terrace into two equal halves; since the length of the terrace is the same in its median part as it is in the lateral branches, the shadow reaches precisely to the corner of the house, etc. In other words, objects are described in terms of their geometric functions and not as elements which can be situated in visually distinct depth perspectives. The resulting abstract structure of Robbe-Grillets backgrounds initiates a reality

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  • Spatial Perception and the Mimetic Mode 213

    which is dependent upon its own logic and not upon any resemblance to the natural world in contrast to the description of Gobsecks room, the antiquarians shop in La Peau de Chagrin or Birotteaus renovations. The section of tomato in Les Gommes, the dock in Le Voyeur, the streets and rooms in Dons le labyrinthe, the maison de rendez-vous and its garden, all reduce the overt appearance of natural or man-made backgrounds to synergetic systems of in- teracting lines and forces because a different concept of the physical world leads Robbe-Grillet away from Balzacs techniques into a presentation generally devoid of color, figurative language, anthropomorphization or affective vocabulary.

    Balzacs settings charged with meaning both explicit and implicit correspond to an action and characters defined in perspective and depth (although not always successfully). Robbe-Grillets backgrounds with their denaturalized objects d o not even carry the normal sense of the things which they detail (houses are to be lived in, tomatoes are to be eaten, etc.). Objects seem in- dependent of their human uses as Roland Barthes has observed.6 In this way setting reflects the minimal use of anecdote, action and characterization in his novels through the destruction of meaningful content. The setting appears at any given moment as a flat surface devoid of anthropomorphic meaning, a formal arrangement of planes which refuses emotional and psychological significance and which destroys three dimensional space. There is no depth perspective in visual terms as there is no profundity in terms of the significance of objects and decors. A phrase in Dons le labyrinthe (Paris: Union Gkngrale &Editions, 10118, 1969) sums it up thusly: au lieu des perspectives spec- taculaires auxquelles ces enfilades de maisons devraient donner naissance, il ny a quun entrecroisement de lignes sans signification, la neige qui continue d e tomber Btant au paysage tout son relief. . . . (p. 16).

    The physical world is simply there and the form alone is what matters, the way in which the lines and surfaces intersect, parallel each other, and so forth:

    Le bord de pierre-une ar&te vive, oblique, b Iintersection de deux plans perpen- diculaires: la paroi verticale fuyant tout droit vers le quai et la rampe qui rejoint le haut de la digue-se prolonge 2 son extremite superieure en haut de la digue. par une ligne horizontale fuyant tout droit vers le quai.7

    Although this is a literal description of what is seen, it creates at the same time a pattern of lines whose order, unity and logic lie in the articulation of its various component parts: oblique, A Iintersection de deux plans, perpen- diculaires, tout droit vers le quai, qui rejoint, horizontale. The descrip- tion is not of objects finally but of their abstract structures and their relation- ships. This is also true of Robbe-Grillets descriptions even when no specifically geometric vocabulary is used. Where Balzacs explanatory setting stands in relation to action and character through its contentual element, Robbe-Grillets descriptive background derives its meaning from its articulation and distribution within the overall formal structure.

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    One can say that because of this difference almost any given background in Balzac could be replaced by any other background with the same or similar contentual qualities without disruption to the sense of the novel. The flowers mentioned above could be other flowers, the faGade of Grandets house could be architecturally altered without damaging the sense of the novel because the constituent elements of Balzacs novels d o not stand in formal relationship one to the other but depend rather upon a common content.

    Robbe-Grillets descriptions on the other hand could not be changed without radically altering the fundamental structure and consequently the sense of his novels because their meaning derives from their precise form and position in the structure of the whole. The engraving hanging in the room occupied by the narrator in Darp le labyrinthe gradually assumes its meaning through assimila- tion into the real decor which surrounds it, the two becoming so intermingled that differentiation after a time becomes impossible. The engraving per se is meaningless except in its formal relationships with the other elements of the novel which in this case provide the external point of reference as the real world does for a Balzac novel.

    La Jalousie, to take another example, depends upon particular angles and planes for the revelation of its psychological and thematic content although such content does not and cannot exist a priori and apart from the formal relationships which are created in each readers private perceptions as he reads. The first few lines of the novel cited above are not simply an objective view of a particular house although this is not apparent until the passage can be placed within a wider context.

    Unlike the psychological implications which are a part of Balzacs backgrounds, the psychological significance of the setting in La Jalousie is only gradually discovered by the attentive reader through a slow accumulation of geometric forms as seen within a severely limited focus. Only when the larger system has been grasped can the meaning of any part be manifest. Because the natural world is not perceived as significant in itself but rather in its abstract and formal arrangement. Robbe-Grillets novels demand an intellectual rather than a sense perception of the setting. Through the formal relationships of elements within a given scene and the overall articulation of scenes within a novel like La Jalousie an emotional tension is created and revealed which conveys the jealousy and sexual fantasies of the husband. The rows of banana plants, the chairs arranged on the veranda, the ice cube melting in a glass, the layout of the house, these elements in themselves reveal nothing about A and Franck or the observing eye. Yet the mental patterns formed by their relationships draw the reader into the novel and force him to find a significance based upon his own perceptions. Any other plantation house, any other set of objects, would have meant another novel since their points of contact could not have been the same, nor their effect upon the reader. The physical background in Dons le lobyrinthe or Lo maison de rendez-uous functions in much the same way and is closely tied as it is in La Jalousie to the problem of distance.

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  • Spatial Perception and the Mimetic Mode 215

    The distance Balzac establishes aims at an atmosphere of factual reality through its detachment and its self-conscious mimetism: . . . vous la voyez coup& dans sa profondeur. , . (Goriot, p. 8). All observers of the scene will see roughly the same thing. The physical world is presented from a distance as if observed by a n interested and yet uninvolved observer in an impressionistic manner, whether it be for the revelation of character and situation or the crea- tion of an atmosphere. Omniscient narrator and fictional personae who think aloud (Rastignacs oc6an de boue, Goriot. p . 276) seem to take the same distance upon reality.

    Robbe-Grillets descriptions on the contrary even when third person as in Les Gommes or at times Le Voyeur, are close-in, observed by an eye which is totally committed yet seemingly objective inasmuch as overt coloring and analogy are usually excluded. It is the selection and ordering of, in themselves, objective fragments of perceptual experience which allow action and characters to exist. The plantation in La Jalousie may be ugly or beautiful; no opinion is either expressed or implied. In any case such an opinion would be irrelevant. The subjective effect so much discussed by the critics comes rather from the deforming closeness, intensity and frequency of the elements used. This precision of detail obscures the natural world as the microscope fractures the surface of objects. (Comparisons have sometimes been made with the techniques of magic realism.) So exact is it that the seemingly objective existence of the world of appearances is destroyed leaving in its wake an ab- stract pattern whose truth is unrelated to verifiable sense data. La Jalousie like the other works of Robbe-Grillet could not exist without this fracturing of ap- pearances and, on a larger scale, narration so that the reader must focus on relationships and systems rather than on self-contained significances. It is only through the things which register upon the eye of the psychotic narrator in La Jalousie for example, and the gradual accumulation of these geometric molecular images that the emotions he experiences can be conveyed. The erotic fantasies of Mathias in Le Voyeur are similarly developed through certain recurring aspects of his environment such as the much analysed figure-eights. Reality is refracted rather than reflected through the choices made necessary by the nature of the observing consciousness. Moving back from the fragments presented the reader reconstructs the observing eye and experiences a set of concomitant emotions.8

    While there may be some development in a limited sense when Balzac con- tinues to add details to a previously described object or setting the meaning of the text is not dependent upon structural accumulations and overlaps as in Robbe-Grillet. The overall effect is fixed by our initial impression and further details are simply meant to add their weight to the original treatment: I 1 est maintenant (after 18 pages) facile de comprendre toute la valeur de ce mot: la maison d M . Grandet. cette maison, pble. froide, silencieuse, situ6e en haut de la ville. et abritQe par les ruines des remparts. Perspectives are thus provided through the situation in narrative (as well as real) time and space of objects and

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  • 216 Kentucky Romance Quarterly

    decors. By continually proving the existence of Grandet and his environment, Balzac affirms the reality of a single external world subject of course to time and physical process, but continuous and comprehensible as well.

    The return to previously mentioned scenes and objects in Robbe-Grillets novels is entirely different in that it destroys any sense of perspective, clarity or absolute. Previous impressions are radically modified, even contradicted, as images and scenes are laid upon one another until the lines for all their in- dividual precision blur and like the jealous husband or the wandering soldier we cannot be sure where obsession ends and external reality begins. The canals in Les Gommes. the chairs arranged on the terrace in La Jalousie, the streets and buildings in Dans le labyrinthe return again and again modified at each en- counter in the consciousness of the narrator until the common denominators, oppositions and modifications reveal a significance within a larger system of lines and forces.

    Although at first glance then Robbe-Grillets descriptions, like Balzacs, may seem to hold a mirror up to the physical world, the organization into volumes and planes soon destroys any mimetic effect. Concrete language leads into the realm of the non-figurative and the non-representational within each given frame as each frame in turn loses its momentarily imitative quality within the patterns of the whole. The reader is confronted with material so specific and well ordered in its relationships that its formal qualities subvert his accepted no- tions of meaning and force an unaccustomed apprehension of the scene presented.

    Perhaps Wilhelm Worringers notion of abstraction and empathy provides some clue to the finally opposed realisms Balzac and R~bbe-Gri l le t .~ Ac- cording to Worringer the urge to empathy, that is. naturalistic, organic, representational art forms is the result of an accommodation and confidence between man and the phenomena of the physical universe: _ . .the precondi- tion for the urge to empathy is a happy pantheistic relationship of confidence between man and the phenomena of the external world. . . (p . 15). In such a situation the artist expresses his feelings about the world through the projection into his work of the lines and forms of the organically vital. The nineteenth cen- tury with its faith in material progress on the one hand and its sense of mans place within the cosmic forces of nature on the other (the romantics, Baudelaires correspondances, Balzacs Swedenborgian mysticism, the con- cept of pathetic fallacy) would suggest in Worringers terms an urge to em- pathy and art forms imitative of the natural world.

    Balzacs decors would seem to coincide with this concept of empathy. They express through their explicit mimetism a belief in the organic complicity of man and the natural world. Man shapes the environment in his own image, and the environment in turn exerts powerful influences upon man in a continuing sym- biotic process. Through the elaboration of a fictional setting within not only each novel but the series of novels which comprises La Comedie humaine Balzac aims at a complete and rational description of an integrated physical

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    world in which each part has its place and contributes its weight to the overall system. Technically this leads in individual descriptive passages to the develop- ment of dominants supported or formed by clusters of related elements bound together in a single impression and functioning as an organic whole. Such passages are dependent for the most part upon massing effects and affective techniques, a feeling-oneself-into the forms of the natural world in Worr- ingers terminology, in which the artists attempts to approximate his work to the facts of organic experience correspond to mans vision of himself in and of the world.

    Robbe-Grillets physical world on the other hand seems to correspond to Worringers notion of abstraction, that is, the artistic impulse which reveals through linear and geometric forms a metaphysical conflict inspired in man by a dread of the obscure, entangled, inexplicable and uncontrollable phenomena of the outside world (absurd man in an absurd universe?), in particular an im- mense dread of space. lo The suppression of three dimensionality through the use of simple line and its development in purely geometric and planimetric regularity, Worringer believes, is the inevitable response to this fear of the obscurity and entanglement of phenomena in space for it is space which links things to one another and gives them their relativity. By removing the object from its natural context, by purifying it of its dependence on life, by approx- imating it to its absolute value, the artist seeks relief from the flux of ap- pearances and the relativity of meaning: The primal artistic impulse has nothing to d o with the rendering of nature. It seeks after pure abstraction as the only possibility of repose within the obscurity and confusion of the world picture and creates out of itself, with instinctive necessity, geometric abstraction (p. 44).

    So too Robbe-Grillet (like the Cubists) seeks an equilibrium not to be found in the capriciousness of the organic and an approximation to naturalistic forms. By suppressing three dimensional space within the novel as painters and sculptors had done long since, Robbe-Grillet realizes formally the work of arts separation from contentual and contextual significance and endeavours to find absolute forms within the perceptual data of lived experience.

    Robbe-Grillets novels all reveal this struggle to isolate individual elements, to see volumes and outlines and to apprehend the thing-in-itself, the attempt to fix the external world, to find certainty and repose in a universe which refuses human values and meanings. This is true at the level of the rCcit as well as in the broader sense with which we are concerned here. But the solid, tangible, discrete entities which make up at the start, as in Balzacs novels, his closed and self-sufficient world are immediately questioned, negated, destroyed through the reduction of both objects and scenes to systems of relationships which ar- ticulate in geometric schemata surfaces. contours and interfaces, and which eliminate the referential and the contentual from the elements of the physical decor. (As in the Baroque no single integrating perspective is privileged; as in

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  • 2 18 Kentucky Romance Quorterly

    Cubism a multiplicity of theoretically simultaneous and often contradictory views is proposed.)

    Internally the absolute values sought for through the precision and intensity of the descriptive passages lead to a necessary and non-referential abstraction of individual material elements in their tangible mimetic concreteness. Repeti- tions, superpositions and overlaps continue this evacuation of anthropornor- phic meaning within the larger narrative context by substituting for a clear and understandable presentation of physical decor, in perspective, a setting which suppresses the cognate-organic in order to focus upon abstract relationships. The intensity and precision of descriptive detail and the repetitions and overlaps of both objects and scenes are upon the narrative and structural plane no other than the working out of a new set of perceptual values in which the desired clear material individuality of objects, not in their organic similitude but in their absolute value, is the goal of artistic volition and psychic necessity.

    By extracting (abstracting) in this way from the natural forms of the physical world and human experience their structures and formal relationships to the detriment of anthropomorphic and organic values Robbe-Grillet expresses a fundamental psychic condition of our time. The will to abstraction coincides with mans increasing doubts about the certainties of empirical knowledge and the usefulness of human perception as an agent of understanding, the final resignation of knowledge, as Worringer puts it.

    While settings mirror the reassuring existence of an understandable world, however cruel, in Balzacs novels they become in the works of Robbe-Grillet signs of emotional, psychological and above all perceptual rupture and instabili- ty which transcend their own simple existence in the direction of an eternal here and now freed from appearances and the contingency of the organic, subject only to the laws of geometric abstraction.

    UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

    NOTES

    1. I cannot agree with A . J. Mount in The Physical Setting in Balzacs Comedie hu- maine. University of Hull Occasional Papers in Modern Languages, no 2 (Hull: Univ. of Hull Publications. 1966). p. 27. who opposes this view of the links between setting and character: . . . the widely accepted view that physical background is an active ingredient in the drama, forming character and determining action does not bear close examina- tion .I

    2. Pour un nouueau roman (Paris: Gallimard. Collection IdCes. 1963). p . 21. 3. LePPre Goriot (Paris: Garnier. 1963). p . 7 . 4. Eug6nie Grandet (ParisSarnier. 1961). p. 1 5. La Jalousie (Paris: Les Editions de Minuit. 1957) , p. 1. 6. Essais Critiques (Paris: Editions du Seuil. 1964). p 31.

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  • Spatial Perception and the Mimetic Mode 219

    7. Le Voyeur (Paris: Les Editions d e Minuit. 1954, p. 13. 8. For a detailed description of narrative and temporal structure in La Jalousie see

    Bruce Morrissettes Les romans de Robbe-Griller (Paris: Les Editions d e Minuit. 1963),

    9. Abstraction and Empathy, trans. Michael Bullock (New York: International Universities Press, 1953), pp. 3-48.

    10. Worringer proposes the same psychic conditions at the root of the will to form in the abstract art of primitives and the abstraction in art of certain highly developed civiliza- tions.

    11. 1 am indebted in a general way for parts of my discussion of the geometric aspects of Robbe-Grillets descriptions to Elly JaffP-Freem. Alain Robbe-Griller et la peinture cubiste (Amsterdam: Meulenhoff, 1966).

    pp. 111-147.

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