The most
significant innovation made by the novel tradition is that it has provided a voice
to everyone in literature. As one of the latest contemporary novels, Generation
X has also employed and developed this innovation by letting those from the
middle class to express their ideas through their own voice. Although there are
three main characters in Generation X, the novel is mostly
narrated through Andy’s perspective. He is a middle-class man, but the novel makes
it possible for him to reflect upon many things in his own deviant view. “You see, when you‘re middle class, you have to live with the fact that
history will ignore you”.[1]
From the mainstream society to
their own parents the three characters of Generation X complain about everything
caused them confusion. “We live small lives on the periphery; we are
marginalized”[2].
This is the underdog’s voice and the novel has made it possible that an
ordinary and middle-class man achieve such a voice. Therefore, in novel
tradition, the representation of individual in literature becomes autonomous,
while the other forms such as poetry and essays are rather conservative.
Traditionally, poetry considered as the possession of nobility while essays
appeared to be more male-dominated form.
The
voice in novel tradition is developed throughout the time in the various
manifestation of the novel. The novel becomes a popular form of literature
because of its capacity to depict characters within their own voices. The voice
is examined at different times in relation to different types of characters. According
to MacKay at the time when the novel was
not welcomed yet, it was the money that motivated Defoe to write not glory[3]. Defoe was not aware of the fact that his work
was going to establish a new genre. The novel “Robinson Crusoe” demonstrates
a voice by which the narrator tells the story from a very personal point of
view and reflects upon his extraordinary adventures, and expresses his spiritual
observations. “I believe for one man, but I was not
satisfied still”[4]. Although Crusoe’s voice
mostly follows a similar continuity and signifies his own self-awareness, in the
contemporary novel such as Orlando different voices through a polyphonic
module, are used to make a diverse narration. “I am the guardian of the
sleeping fawn; the snow is dear to me; and the moon rising; and the silver sea
[…] we have no choice left but confess-he was a woman”[5]. This
significant innovation within the novel tradition provides a character to
reflect upon various experiences including opposite genders and different state
of social life, though it still let the novel to keep verisimilitude.
Bibliography
Coupland, Douglas. Generation X: Tales for an
Accelerated Culture. London: Abacus, 1996.
Defoe, Daniel. Robinson Crusoe. Victoria 3008, Australia.
Penguin Group (Australia), 2010.
MacKay,
Marina. “Origins of the Novel.” In The Cambridge Introduction to the Novel 21-33.
Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2011.
Woolf, Virginia. Orlando: A Biography.
Vintage Classics. 2004.
[1]
Coupland, Generation X,
171.
[2]
Ibid, 14.
[3]
MacKay, Origins
of the Novel, 54.
[4]
Defoe, Robinson Crusoe,
58.
[5]
Woolf, Orlando: A Biography, 85-87
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