Waverley (Scott, 1814)

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Walter Scott. Waverley. Pub. 1814. Ed. Peter Garside. New York: Penguin Classics, 2011. Print.

  • Pub 3 volumes by Ballantyne in 1814 -- the 31s 6p model established with Kenilworth a few years later (Sutherland 1976)

Context

  • anonymous authorship and then "the author of Waverley" until 1827: imitating the feminine technique of keeping name off to generate interest
    • early problem of inscription vs erasure in construction of authorship, which continues with periodicals and novels: see Buurma 2013 and Brake 2001
  • 2 different types of narrative: Austen originating the C19 domestic novel tradition, Scott the historical novel (they reconverge in Mayor of Casterbridge (Hardy, 1886))
  • Progress vs primitivism: a novelist of modernization and nation formation (Ivanhoe) -> Waverley on the formation of Great Britain
  • 1745 Jacobite Rebellion
    • Protestant German George I on the throne
      • Whigs, English (Waverley's father) (progressive, middle class)
      • Catholic Scottish Stuarts: conservative, landed gentry - Tories, Highlanders (Waverley's uncle Everard)
      • Waverley wavers (!) inbetween
  • Scott's reading much like Waverley's (romance, oral traditions, etc)
    • print culture underpinnings (St Clair 2004)
    • early c19 fad for "ye olden timey" literature: Scottish Minstrelsy -> antiquarianism (see Lynch 2015)
  • Scott became a novelist because Byron came on the poetic scene in 1813
  • Waverley as experiment on public taste
    • different authorial guises foregrounding the mediation of storytelling: you can never forget you're reading, you're not left alone for long
  • later, novel canon formation through the editorship of an anthology (see Price 2000)
  • Historical context
    • 1707: Acts of Union: parliaments united
      • Scotland an "internal colony"
      • Ensuring protestant succession (so Scotland couldn't have a Catholic monarch) -- James II overthrown in 1688 Glorious Revolution (key for Macaulay)
    • Jacobites
      • Scots landed families, feudal allegiance
      • risings in 1715, 1745 (Charles, the Young Pretender, making a bid for the throne)
      • Tension: Scott's dual Scottish/English audience (an exercise in sympathy through historical alterity)
  • Novel expectations established in paratext: title and subtitle - a loaded description
    • "more a description of men than manners" (p. 5) - again, vs. the domestic, feminized novel tradition
      • action / private, exteriority / interiority, universal / particular: not just binaries but the cycling between them makes it a more complex work of interplay and emphasis
  • Conceptions of history (see Griffiths 2016)
    • "the great book of Nature" (6) (see Chartier 1994 for book as metaphor)
    • stadial theory of history (Enlightenment): peoples/societies move through the same stages of development at different rates
      • Enlightenment historiography
      • teleological, progressive, liberal
      • interest in "primitive societies," like the Highlanders
      • Spatial and temporal coordinates: as Waverley goes further north he goes back in time (Armstrong 2005)
      • the way history develops according to universal rules
      • the mediation between history and literature to see history as a series of revolutions

Reading/Class Notes

  • 13-14 Waverley's reading
    • W a feminized reader: doesn't finish her reading
    • chivalric romances: honor, valor
      • reading the world through genres, allows Scott to keep the romance plot of this realist novel (later characters in Middlemarch (Eliot, 1872) also use literature to interpret the world)
    • bad effect of this reading: "retired and abstracted" (34) (Wavering), reading's isolating effects: "internal sorcery"
      • 15 implied masturbating in the library rather than out playing sport (sexual education -> enervation)
    • Scott is famous for feminized, passive heroes: Lukacs 1937 says they're passive for a reason
      • real historical personages are minor characters in this kind of novel
      • this type of passive hero functions to allow Scott to explore the conflict, a reflecting mirror: he's a nonentity for a reason
  • Intro to Scotland (34ff Tully-Veolan): spatializing historical progress
    • a pretty radical shift: picturesque and dirty - the double imperative to show need for improvement and that there's much to offer
  • 49 Dryden footnote -- the authenticity of the textual apparatus raising the profile of fiction
  • Function of verse (fragments)
    • connection to tradition, women and "simple" Davy connect to informal/oral culture vs formal/written
    • 114 legitimating by connecting to European aesthetics (vs the local and domestic) (Claude, Ariosto, the sublime)
    • 64 editing the text of Rose's song
    • Scott v much mediating the scene vs. the natural/authetic song of Rosa, Flora: too close to oral tradition
  • Verse fragments
    • some extratextual from other poets
    • some his (but only noted in the MS) (like Eliot's epigrams in Middlemarch)
    • impt for Romantic writers, usually poets more than novelists (Coleridge, "Kubla Khan")
      • fragment as potential, gesturing toward wholeness/completeness
      • Davy: Gesturing toward lost cultural whole: all he has are the pieces of a culture in the process of fragmenting
      • double valence of potential and decay/loss
      • Davy himself somewhat fragmented in his place in the narrative, he eludes definition or motive
  • Flora and Rose
    • Rose -- Lowlands - semi-feudal (landlord, could try people but Branwardine doesn't do it)
      • picturesque (Italian painting)
    • Flora -- Highlands - fully feudal, political indifference beyond chief, sublime (awe-inspiring), savage
    • Somewhat racially coded, too: R Anglo-Saxon, F Celtic/Gallic -- not racial in the contemporary sense but still highly coded
  • Tully-Veolan liminal, on the edge of the higliands
  • Rose's masculine reading vs. Waverley's (ch. 13)
  • Waverley wavering
    • he has no political opinions of his own - anti-Hanoverian but not yet pro-Jacobite
    • Lukacs 1937: W is "neutral ground"
    • French Revolution made history a "mass experience" by involving ordinary people in the political life of the nation-state
      • also Anderson 1983 on nation as imagined community effected by and then reified in print
  • Scott's conservative search for a "middle way" in English history
    • Hegel - thesis / synthesis/ antithesis, Hanover / to be seen / Jacobite
    • Aristotle: plot as more faithful to the real than character
    • Lukacs 42: "re-experiencing social and human motives which led men to think, feel, and act as just as they did in historical reality."
  • Reading Romeo and Juliet (3.7, 270-3)
    • legitimation of his novel and of Waverley, who will be interpreted as fickle
    • interweaving "domestic" and political thru Sh romance (across genre lines - R&J and Much Ado)
    • inseparability of marriage and politics, which ties thematically to the Sh
    • Domesticity as retreat
    • Tully-Veolan - political space masquerading as domestic space (in Habermas 1962 terms, public-facing privacy)
  • W living out his romantic daydreams when meeting Charles the pretender in ch. 43 (the scene of Charles sorting things out in Vol 3 ch. 11)
  • Waverley's marriage to Rose as healing
  • Waverley lack of development, or his lasting habit of aestheticizing tragic events even when more experienced (writing to Rose on 351)
    • eliciting our sympathy by appealing to the pathos of the death of the Highland way of life
    • Talbot as a foil for Fergus, as English as F is Scottish
    • they represent legible political stances while W is a "morass of sentiment" (tho a nice guy)
  • W's performances: R&J then the cultural appropriation of pibroch, strathspey, etc (312)
    • followed by elegiac description of the aftermath of Culloden at the beginning of the next chapter
    • conquest and appropriation: Highlanders explicitly related to black people at several points
    • orientalism: picking pieces (vs. Shakespeare who suffeses the prose)
      • fragments and quotation/appropriation vs. direct quotation, not offset
      • trying to write himself into the English tradition
  • idiom registering historical difference (Griffiths 2016)
    • dialect in print - Scott an early practitioner of reproduction dialect
    • cultural alienation, unintelligibility
    • fine line betwen preserving history and making stereotypes
    • Hardy received criticism of this for Mayor of Casterbridge (Hardy, 1886)
  • the more we get into war the more he hesitates to represent history
    • rhetorical differentiation from history
    • understanding of audience's knowledge
  • Urban spaces sketched while Highland spaces are in detail (unknown space)
    • urban space "too major," Lukacs might say
    • too well-known and yet Bonnie Prince Charlie is very individually clear, a major character (301) (could tie this to Woloch 2003 on character space in historical novel)
  • Evan Dhu defining "honor" in court scene (Griffiths 2016) (ch. 21, 340ff)
  • Romance vs "real history" in W's character
    • more experience but still things get figured out for him in the denouement
    • people doing things behind the scene against him throughout and then he does something off-stage with buying Tully-Veolan
  • Last chapter and/before "Preface"
    • by the end he's a a functional role vs an individual one
    • estate as metonym for nation, jointly founded
      • ownership of property associated with caution and prudence in Scott's novel
      • his capital does things, not him
    • Waverley's emptiness: necessary to keep focus in an historical novel? But the emotional and personal experience of history is so much the focus here
    • something about intrusive narrators in Scott and Dickens, they pile things up at the start and finish sketchily at speed