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ABSTRACT Title of Document: BRITISH MODERNIST ... - DRUM

ABSTRACT Title of Document: BRITISH MODERNIST ... - DRUM

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middles and British neo-modernist texts may proceed. In short, I believe a formal<br />

approach to be useful in narrowing and focusing the scope <strong>of</strong> inquiry, as much as I<br />

consider narratological concerns to be a worthy <strong>of</strong> study in and <strong>of</strong> themselves. It is<br />

my hope that others who share different sets <strong>of</strong> concerns and approaches will take up<br />

these neo-modernist texts, as well as the subject <strong>of</strong> (modernist) narrative middles.<br />

Beginning with questions <strong>of</strong> how we find the narrative middle <strong>of</strong> a text,<br />

Chapter One explores multiple middles in Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim. Lord Jim is<br />

famously a novel <strong>of</strong> two distinct halves: a sea-tale with an air <strong>of</strong> mystery exploring<br />

the guilt and wanderings <strong>of</strong> Jim following his abandonment <strong>of</strong> the leaking Patna with<br />

its cargo <strong>of</strong> pilgrims, followed by an exotic adventure tale as Jim attempts to redeem<br />

himself on the remote island <strong>of</strong> Patusan. With this shift in genre (and attendant<br />

approaches to meaning, tense, mood, and voice), the narrative middle would be the<br />

section <strong>of</strong> text that effects a shift between these two halves—or may be read as<br />

different from both <strong>of</strong> them. However, Lord Jim does not have a neat formal division<br />

into two Books to mark its halves. This chapter, then, is in part an examination <strong>of</strong><br />

how readers might construct the middle <strong>of</strong> a text, as it discusses possible middles in<br />

Lord Jim before settling on an interpretation <strong>of</strong> the novel’s most prominent short<br />

middle: the much-discussed passage in Chapter XX in which Marlow meets with the<br />

merchant Stein, who <strong>of</strong>fers Jim the job in Patusan. Stein’s key act is not monetary,<br />

but interpretive in nature. By re-reading Jim as a Romantic, and setting the terms <strong>of</strong><br />

that Romanticism, he sets down a narrative goal and structure which is met by the<br />

Romantic adventure tale that follows. In so doing, he also shifts the narrative from<br />

one that is oriented around beginnings (the Patna episode and its meaning) to one that<br />

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