We tend to think of the Great American Novel, Lawrence Buell rightly suggests, as 鈥渢he brainchild of another era鈥. It harks back to the 19th and early 20th centuries, a time of 鈥渁nxious collective hand-wringing鈥 about the apparent 鈥渕addeningly slow emergence of a robust national literary voice鈥. This book starts by asking whether such a concept has any validity, or was and is simply a product of 鈥渂ad exceptionalism or national swagger鈥. If the latter is indeed sometimes true, it is noticeable that the novels generally put forward as candidates for such honours tend to be 鈥渁nything but patriotic鈥, focusing, rather, on the gap between the ideal of America as a 鈥渓and of promise鈥 built on principles of liberty and equality, and the countervailing social reality.
As Buell knows, any work of criticism with 鈥渢he Great American Novel鈥 in its title will be met with some scepticism by a contemporary audience. Nowadays, overviews of American literature tend either to consider it as one part of a larger transnational whole or, conversely, to focus on its heterogeneity, its medley of ethnic and regional voices and points of view. One of the strengths of this book, however, is its critical sophistication. Well versed in contemporary literary theory, and aware that concepts of nationhood are far from static, Buell nonetheless argues that we should continue to take the idea of the Great American Novel seriously; indeed, one section is titled 鈥淭he dream of the Great American Novel miraculously survives its discreditation鈥. It does so, he suggests, due to the very elasticity of the concept and to the number of authors who still continue to attempt 鈥渂ig national fictions鈥, crucial 鈥渞eference points for imagining U.S. national identity鈥.
This is a comparativist project. To understand what is at stake in any one contender for the title of Great American Novel, we must imagine it 鈥渋n multiple conversations with many others, and not just U.S. literature either鈥. Any such novel will centre on an individual figure in some way representative of the larger society and must 鈥減rovide at least implicitly some consequential reflection on U.S. history and culture and its defining institutions 鈥 democracy, individualism, capitalism, sectionalism, immigration, expansionism, signature landscapes, demographic mix鈥.
There are, Buell says, four main types of potential Great American Novels. Nathaniel Hawthorne鈥檚 The Scarlet Letter epitomises the first 鈥 a cultural 鈥渕aster narrative鈥, identified as such by the number of reinterpretations and imitations that follow in its wake. Second are the stories that focus on individual growth (the Bildungsroman) and its particular American variant, the rise from humble origins (The Great Gatsby, Invisible Man, etc). Buell鈥檚 third type is 鈥渢he romance of the divides鈥 where a novel鈥檚 plot focuses on 鈥渋ssues of sectional and/or ethnoracial division鈥 (Absalom, Absalom!, Beloved, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin, etc). Fourth are those deliberately large-scale novels such as Moby-Dick, U.S.A., Gravity鈥檚 Rainbow, with a diverse cast of characters 鈥渋magined as social microcosms or vanguards鈥 and whose lives are figured 鈥渋n relation to epoch-defining public events or crises鈥.
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Buell ends up then with 鈥渁 pluriverse in motion rather than a unitary conception of Americanness鈥 and the Great American Novel as a number of 鈥渟hifting, and often dissonant pathways鈥 that find their full meaning in the diversity and interweaving relationships they trace. It is through 鈥渋ts interdependencies as well as through its particularities鈥 that a work becomes a contender for the title, he argues.
Itself something of an epic given the number and variety of the texts it considers, The Dream of the Great American Novel is the work of a critic with extensive knowledge of his field and the ability, via close readings, to bring illuminating insights to novels that one might have imagined had been already done close to critical death. He achieves this mainly by focusing on exactly the close relationships and interweavings described above.
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As I read this book, I was excited by the unexpectedness, even brilliance, of many of its commentaries. This is an important work that every scholar of American literature, and many who are not, will want to read. It redefines the concept of the Great American Novel and rethinks the nature of the canonical for our contemporary critical times.
The Dream of the Great American Novel
By Lawrence Buell
Harvard University Press, 500pp, 拢29.95
ISBN 9780674051157 and 4726321 (e-book)
Published February 2014
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