Title: Thomas Hardys Brains A Class of 1962 Endowment Talk
1Thomas Hardys BrainsA Class of 1962 Endowment
Talk
2Neurology, Psychology, and Hardys imagination
- A book-length study of the influence of
contemporary brain science and psychology on
Hardys imagery of mental and emotional
experience in his fiction and poetry, Thomas
Hardys Brains supplements existing work on
Hardys philosophical and scientific sources with
a fresh look at his representations of brains,
nerves, and sensations.
3Who influenced Hardy?
- Never a slavish adapter of any one individuals
thinking, Hardys work reveals the influence of
contemporary neurological and psychological
research. These influences combine with the
well-documented impact of thinkers such as
Darwin, Comte, Fourier, and Mill, as well as with
Hardys own observations of human and animal
behavior, to support his materialism and
depictions of emotional reactions.
4Hardys sources and acquaintances
- I explore the direct and indirect sources of
Hardys knowledge of late Victorian and early
twentieth-century psychology, including his
reading, his intellectual circle, and his chance
acquaintance with one of the most important
neurologists of his day, Henry Head, the editor
of Brain, who became a friend and neighbor
towards the end of Hardys life.
5Hardys Theory of Mind
- The book will describe Hardys evolving theory
of mind as evinced in fictional characters
interpret his depiction of characters suffering
from various neurological pathologies and
explore the imagistic schemas of brain and mind
in his poetry, including The Dynasts.
6Where the study fits in broadly
- Recent scholarship in Victorian studies explores
the relationship between psychological theories
and ideas about the novel and reading (e.g., Nick
Dames). The young field of cognitive approaches
to literary study features single author studies
of Frost, Shakespeare, and Dickinson, but little
work on the novel. Some forthcoming or recent
work describes the Theory of Mind of c18 and c19
novelists (Lisa Zunshine, Blakey Vermeule).
7Where the study fits in more narrowly
- Work on Thomas Hardy has emphasized his
philosophy over his psychology. However, in the
late c19 and early c20, psychology attains status
as a separate discipline. Psychological readings
of Hardys work have featured Freudian or Jungian
approaches. A few scholars (especially of The
Dynasts) describe Hardys monist influences.
Though he is widely regarded as a materialist
writer, Hardys awareness of contemporary
neurology has been completely neglected.
8My research questions
- What did Hardy know about contemporary
psychology? (knew Bain secondhand through J. S.
Mill read Spencer and Comte) - What did Hardy read? (His Literary Notebooks
and Letters are major resources, as well as his
allusions) - Would Hardy have ever seen The Lancet? (He
belonged to several professional mens clubs in
London these clubs had well-stocked libraries
with periodicals.)
9Whom did Hardy know?
- Famous people (Leslie Stephen Henry Head)
- Ordinary folk (Hardy was an acute observer of
regular peoples behavior. He depicts characters
suffering from depression, phobias, obsessions
monomania, and Tourettes Syndrome.) - Animals (with his first wife Emma, Hardy
strongly supported measures against cruelty to
animals. He wrote sympathetically about the
experiences and likely sensations of dogs,
horses, sheep, and even birds.) - Himself (introspection was a respected
methodology in early psychological labs. Hardy
was an acutely introspective writer.)
10Methods
- I combine biographical and historical research
into Hardys life and influences with more
literary forms of analysis. I am scrutinizing - Concordance data
- Representations of major psychological areas of
research and speculation (human and other forms
of will consciousness the senses memory the
brain and nerves) in the poetry and fiction - Representations of fictional characters
suffering from psychological disorders - Representations of early brain science (The
Woodlanders).
11Forays into Schema-Reading
- In addition to the more traditional literary
analytical methods mentioned earlier, Thomas
Hardys Brains represents my first effort in
using the methodology of cognitive poetics to
read Hardys imagistic schemas. Following Lakoff,
Turner, Johnson, and Stockwell, I attempt to map
the schemas of Hardys lyric poetry and the
spatiality of his fictional worlds. It remains
to be seen whether these new vocabularies for
analysis actually add anything useful to the
literary critics tool box. Readings in a works
cognitive poetics often meet with intense
skepticism and even hostility. Is it worth it?
12Enumerating Hardys Brains
- Concordance data shows that Hardys first
sensational novel, Desperate Remedies (1871)
employs brain or brains 21 times. The Woodlanders
(1887), in which a doctor lusts after the brain
of an old lady, comes in second with 13 mentions.
All but two books Hardy published mention brains
the exceptions come from among his romances and
fantasies, The Trumpet-Major (1880) and The
Well-Beloved (1892, 1897). Towards the end of his
career, Hardys use of the word brain peaks in
the long poem, The Dynasts (1904, 1906, 1908),
with 26 occurrences.
13What does he mean by brains?
- tends to mean simply intelligence,
- refers to the contents of the skullas in The
Dynasts - diseases of the brain, particularly in
animals, appear in Hardys references to
shriveled up or liquefied brains. - suicide crops up in idioms featuring the
blowing out of brains.
14Do Hardys brains change?
- Desperate Remedies and the experience of living
in a busy, fevered brain -
- She thought and thought of that single fact
which had been told herthat the first Mrs.
Manston was still living till her brain seemed
ready to burst its confinement with excess of
throbbing. - . . .
- As is well known, ideas are so elastic in a
human brain, that they have no constant measure
which may be called their actual bulk. Any
important idea may be compressed to a molecule by
an unwonted crowding of others and any small
idea will expand to whatever length and breadth
of vacuum the mind may be able to make over to
it. -
15Do Hardys brains change?
- The Woodlanders and brain tissue under the
microscope - She applied her eye, and saw the usual circle
of light patterned all over with a cellular
tissue of some indescribable sort.. . . - Fitzpiers reveals it is old Mr. Souths brain
tissue and explains, Here am I. . .endeavoring
to carry on simultaneously the study of
physiology and transcendental philosophy, the
material world and the ideal, so as to discover
if possible a point of contact between them and
your finer sense is quite offended. -
16The Dynasts neurological imagery
- The anatomy of the Immanent Will appears,
exhibiting as one organism the anatomy of life
and movement in all humanity and vitalized
matter - SPIRIT OF THE PITIES (after a pause)
- Amid this scene of bodies substantive
- Strange waves I sight like winds grown visible
- Which bear mens forms on their innumerous coils,
- Twining and serpentining round and through.
- Also retracting threads like gossamers
- . . .
17The Dynasts neurological imagery
- SPIRIT OF THE YEARS
- These are the Prime Volitions,fibrils, veins,
- Will-tissues, nerves, and pulses of the Cause,
- That heave throughout the Earths compositure.
- Their sum is like the lobule of a Brain
- Evolving always that it wots not of
- A Brain whose whole connotes the Everywhere,
- And whose procedure may but be discerned
- By phantom eyes like ours the while unguessed
- Of those it stirs, who (even as ye do) dream
- Their motions free, their orderings supreme
-
-
18The Dynasts neurological imagery
-
- At once, as earlier, a preternatural clearness
possesses the atmosphere of the battle-field, in
which the scene becomes anatomized and the living
masses of humanity transparent. The controlling
Immanent Will appears therein, as a brain-like
network of currents and ejections, twitching,
interpenetrating, entangling, and thrusting
hither and thither the human forms. - . . .
- There immediately is shown visually the
electric state of mind that animates WELLINGTON,
GRAHAM, HILL, KEMPT, PICTON, COLVILLE, and other
responsible ones on the British side and on the
French KING JOSEPH stationary on the hill
overlooking his own centre, and surrounded by a
numerous staff that includes his adviser MARSHAL
JOURDAN, with, far away in the field, GAZAN,
D'ERLON, REILLE, and other marshals. This vision,
resembling as a whole the interior of a beating
brain lit by phosphorescence, in an instant fades
back to normal.
19Schemas of Brain
- Thoughts of Phena. BRAIN IS A FIRE BRAIN IS A
CONTAINER. - Natures Questioning. BRAIN IS AN EMPTY
CONTAINER. - A Wasted Illness. BRAIN IS A THEATER BRAIN IS
A GOTHIC BUILDING BRAIN IS A CONTAINER you must
journey throughLIFE IS A JOURNEY to get to
death DEATH IS A DOOR. - He Resolves to Say No More. BRAIN IS A FIRE.
20Likely structure of the book
- Contemporary psychology and neurology the big
frame - Hardys life and influences
- From Desperate Remedies to The Dynasts evolution
of Hardys schemas - The fiction, esp. The Woodlanders
- The lyric poetry and its image complexes
- Hardys emotion-saturated theory of mind
21Where this project fits in my work
- When I wrote my first book, I was mainly a
Victorianist one of my chapters focused on
Thomas Hardy. Since then I have worked in the
areas of the novel, narrative theory, and
literature and psychology (though not cognitive
poetics). Like Hardy, I believe that affect is a
neglected aspect of cognition. In my most recent
book, I argue for the centrality of literary
empathy for novel readers. Again like Hardy, I
hold out little hope that reading alone can
change the world, but with the old meliorist,
believe that our feeling responses to other
people and their words might make it a little
less dreadful.
22Where this project fits in my teaching
- In winter 2007, a year from now, Ill teach
English 299 Seminar for Prospective Majors. My
topic will be Thomas Hardy, Novelist and Poet. I
will integrate the methods and research questions
Ive broached today into that seminar, in order
to get the assistance of 15 smart English majors
in thinking through my project before I write it. - Thus we prosper, as scholars and teachers.