Published at:
Real Clear Politics
 
Real Clear Religion
 
Feb 26, 2015

 
 
-------------------------------------
 
Christianity Today
 
Joseph Bottum



The Novel as Protestant Art
A great metaphysical drama played out on the world's  stage.  
 
 
So, here's a proposition: The novel was an art form—the  art form—of the 
modern Protestant West, and as the main strength of established  Protestant 
Christendom began to fail in Europe and the United States in recent  decades, 
so did the cultural importance of the novel. 
The proposition begins to unravel as soon as we offer it, of  course. By 
the time we are done listing all the demurrals, adjustments, and  trimmings, 
little seems left of the notion that the novel is an artifact of the  
Protestant West. Little, however. Not nothing. It's hardly a  new thesis that 
the 
novel exploded out of 18th-century England to become a  dominant art form of 
Western culture. In 1957, for example, the literary critic  Ian Watt 
published a work called The Rise of the  Novel, which claimed exactly that. And 
it's not much of a leap to argue  that the Protestantism of those foundational 
English novelists would have an  effect on the shape of the novel down 
through the ages. 
Among academics, Watt is rather casually dismissed these days;  certainly 
his work was significant back in the late 1950s, they might say in  distant 
praise, but it valorizes male British authors, fails to appreciate the  truly 
radical impulses suppressed by all organs of culture (including the  
publishers of novels), and implies that literature can be judged aesthetically  
beyond the determinations of power in social politics. All of which is a 
little  odd as a criticism of Watt, for The Rise of the  Novel was intent on 
finding solidly progressive and secularizing reasons  for the rise of the 
novel. 
Watt looked, as a good socialist might, at economics,  particularly the 
economics of book publishing. And he insisted, as a good  rationalist might, on 
the scientific and industrial changes of society after the  Middle Ages and 
the new understanding of the self as defined by the early modern  
philosophers, from Descartes to Locke. 
What he overlooked is the religious root of it all. Aware of the  
multiplicities of Protestantism, in all the variety of its post-Reformation  
sects in 
Great Britain, Watt nonetheless missed the unities of  Protestantism: the 
central current of manners and morals that Protestantism had  created by the 
time it reached its full cultural victory over Catholicism in  England in 
the 18th century. This general Protestantism was, in a sense, too big  for 
Watt to see: the received setting and given condition of the fiction. It was  
the secret de Polichinelle of the English novelists, the thing no one  
bothers to mention because they assume that everyone already knows it. And for  
too many subsequent literary critics, it became simply unknowable, hidden by  
their sure and certain faith in the novel as the mirror (or even the motor) 
of  secularization. 
The truth is that even after all the necessary caveats and  qualifications 
are registered, the notion of the modern novel's Protestant  essence won't 
disappear—for something in the confident precincts of  Western culture really 
did latch onto extended prose fiction in the 18th  century, and it wouldn't 
let go as the centuries rolled by. Yes, there was  poetry and a flowering 
of music through those long years. Painting, sculpture,  dance: all the 
outpouring of European art from the Renaissance on. Nonetheless,  for more than 
two centuries, the West increasingly took the novel as the art  form most 
central to its cultural self-awareness: the artistic device by which  the 
culture undertook some of its most serious attempts at self-understanding.  And 
the form of that device was developed to explain and solve particularly  
Protestant problems of the self in modern times. 
2.
To get to a conclusion like that, of  course, we have to understand what we 
mean by the novel—the Novel with a capital  N; the novel as an art form. 
And that proves exceedingly difficult. No  one has any compelling idea of what 
unites The Manuscript  Found in Saragossa, Fanny Hill, Notes from 
Underground, My  Ántonia, Nausea, and Midnight's Children as a single type of 
writing. No one  has any serious notion of what could possibly make the English 
writers Thomas  Love Peacock, Ann Radcliffe, William Harrison Ainsworth, A. A. 
Milne, Daphne du  Maurier, and Anthony Powell a single kind of author, even 
though we say that  they all wrote novels. 
Are we then forced back to the broad category of the novel simply  as an 
extended piece of fiction? If so, literary history gives us novels long  
before 18th-century England came to be. Perhaps we can set aside the epic  
myth-tellings of the ancient world—Gilgamesh, the  Iliad, the Ramayana, and  
all 
the rest—since they lack, we typically suppose, the self-conscious invention  
and falsity, the knowing fictitiousness, that we mean by the word  fiction. 
And perhaps we can set aside works from the Latin  Aeneid to the Old 
English Beowulf by  holding a general insistence on prose (while admitting 
modern 
verse novels as  specialty items in the canon, from Alexander Pushkin's 1831 
Eugene Onegin to Vikram Seth's 1986 The Golden Gate). 
Still, what are we to call the extended prose narratives of the  ancient 
world—with the Romans giving us Petronius' Satyricon in the 1st century and 
Apuleius' Golden Ass in the 2nd? What about Murasaki Shikibu's Tale of Genji 
(c. 1020) in Japan? What about the Chinese  Romance of the Three Kingdoms (c. 
1500)? If the  novel is a modern, Protestant-inflected thing, then we are 
left without much of  a category for Longus' 2nd-century Greek Daphnis and  
Chloe, the 7th-century Sanskrit Dashakumaracharita, and Thomas Malory's 1470s 
compilation  of medieval romances, Le Morte d'Arthur—along with  such 
17th-century work as Marie de La Fayette's The  Princess of Clèves and Miguel 
Cervantes' Don  Quixote. 
But it's exactly there, with a mention of the 1605 Don Quixote, that we 
begin to sense a change in those  extended stories, a new and different world 
emerging, and Cervantes' work is  always cited in this context: the first 
widely read book of fiction to be taken  as modern. Before Don Quixote, we have 
novels with a  sort of asterisk. Nod toward them as politely and 
judiciously as you want; they  are nonetheless novels mostly by courtesy of 
their 
being works of extended prose  fiction. After Don Quixote, we begin to have 
novels  in the strictest sense anyone could want to give the word: book-length 
modern  stories with a sense of spiritual development over the plot's 
timeline,  characters with interior selves, a drive toward artistic unity, and 
an 
ambition  for the book to be revelatory commentary on the human condition. 
The history of literature is never tidy. For all that it is an art  form 
produced by ostensible heroes, the novelist understood as solitary genius,  
every breakthrough in some aspect of the form proves to have predecessors—
failed  or unrecognized or unfocused attempts to achieve the new effect before 
authors  and audience were ready to grasp it. One could find this fact, as we 
have, in  the awkwardness of defining the novel as the art form of a 
particular era. Or  one could find it in the question of what to do with 
Boccaccio, who predates  Cervantes by 250 years. Indeed, we get the word novel 
from 
the Italian  novella, which means new—the new style of shorter tales that  
the influential Boccaccio wrote in the Decameron. 
For that matter, how are we to take Gargantua  and Pantagruel, which 
Rabelais began publishing in France 70 years before  Don Quixote appeared? In 
2007, the Czech novelist  Milan Kundera took to the pages of the New Yorker to  
insist that Rabelais belongs with Cervantes, and probably above him, as "the 
 founder of an entire art, the art of the novel." 
Most readers will understand what Kundera means. Gargantua and Pantagruel 
is a sprawling mess, true  enough—a large, loose, baggy monster of a book, to 
use the phrase with which  Henry James described Dickens' 1844 Martin  
Chuzzlewit. And in James' disparaging line we can hear the High Victorian  goal 
of making the novel a tight and self-complete work of great art, as unified  
as a Beethoven symphony: symbol, plot, character, and diction all moving 
toward  a single end. Rabelais had no such ambition, which tends to weaken 
Kundera's  claiming of Gargantua and Pantagruel as the  foundation of the 
modern novel. In his seminal 1965 study of the book, Mikhail  Bakhtin 
identified 
the mad festival of Gargantua and  Pantagruel as entirely premodern: a 
definitively Renaissance  work by a bawdy Christian humanist very much in the 
line of Erasmus. 
In this, I think, we have to side with Bakhtin. Only the thinnest  account 
of Western literature would dismiss Gargantua and  Pantagruel as merely a 
cul-de-sac and a curiosity. Nevertheless, there is  a discernible difference 
between Cervantes and Rabelais, just as there is a  difference between 
Cervantes and Boccaccio, for Don  Quixote presents us with something new and 
distinct in the post-classical  West: both more modern and more of what we 
recognize as a novel than anything  that had come before.


 
 
I do not wish to hide the evaluation of Cervantes toward which I'm  aiming. 
Hearing an attempt to dismiss Don Quixote as  incidental to the history of 
the modern novel, we should leap to the book's  defense. This is where the 
novel first emerges; this is one of  the few truly great works of world 
literature, and without it we do not have  much of what follows: No Cervantes, 
no 
Dickens. At the same time, hearing an  attempt to claim Don Quixote as the 
very definition  of the modern novel, we should shy a little. It's a long, 
improbable path from  Cervantes' La Mancha to Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford, and 
the possibilities of books  as diverse as Daniel Deronda, Là-bas, Portrait of 
the Artist as a  Young Man, and The Glass Bead Game are not  easily 
discerned in the pages of Don Quixote. 
Similarly, the 18th-century English works of Defoe, Richardson,  and 
Fielding—the writers on whom Ian Watt focuses in his account of the emerging  
novel
—are not derived from Don Quixote quite as  easily as literary histories 
often assume. In her 2000 study Cervantes, the Novel, and  the New World, the 
academic Diana de Armas Wilson  attacks Watt as a narrow-minded British 
nationalist and quite possibly an  anti-Hispanic racist for undervaluing 
Cervantes in an effort "to install Daniel  Defoe as 'the first key figure in 
the 
rise of the novel.' " 
But surely we can distinguish Cervantes and Defoe without being  accused of 
chauvinism and bigotry, for the two authors are writing different  forms 
and aiming at different ends. Something has changed between Cervantes and  
Defoe. Something separates the Catholic Spain of 1605 in which Don Quixote 
appears from the Protestant England of 1719 in  which Robinson Crusoe is 
published. Something has  allowed the inner life of the hero to appear on the 
page. 
And, I want to claim,  those somethings involve the Protestant presentation 
of the spiritual  journey of the main character as a unique self—together 
with the English novel's  determination to provide alternate lives for the 
reader to experience  vicariously and the confident sense of modernity as an 
age defined by more than  its rebellion against the medieval past. 
However modern Don Quixote seems when  compared with the Decameron or 
Gargantua and Pantagruel, Cervantes' work can also feel  unmodern to readers 
now. 
Think, for example, of how new characters suddenly  appear, chance-met 
along the hero's journey, and promptly begin telling stories:  barely related 
interpolations that serve mostly to bulk up the text with  something 
interesting. This picaresque device will last until at least Dickens'  1839 
Nicholas 
Nickleby, but the Victorian age  quickly thereafter grew too embarrassed to 
use it much. The rise of magazines  allowed such smaller tales to take 
clearer shape within an author-and-reader  agreement about the genre of short 
stories, and the interpolated tale came to  seem something like an admission of 
failure: an acknowledgement that the author  had not succeeded at finding 
the unified work of art that defined the High  Victorian novel, from Jane 
Eyre to The Wings of the Dove. 
Think, too, of the curious metafictional comedy of the second part  of Don 
Quixote (with the characters portrayed as  having read the first part of the 
novel that created them)—from which one could  point out a different 
direction the central current of the art form might have  taken. In fact, some 
novels did flow down that rival streambed,  starting with the classic 
self-referential, Möbius-strip comedy of Laurence  Sterne's 1759 Tristram 
Shandy (by 
an author who  often refers to Rabelais, in confirmation of our sense of an 
alternate history  the novel could have followed). 
In other words, the influence of Cervantes was certainly present  in the 
beginning: Interest in the author's work helped begin the 18th-century  run of 
British picaresques and thereby contributed greatly to the establishment  
of the novel as a ready form of art in the English language. In the 1850 
David Copperfield, Dickens' clearest signal that he was  leaving the picaresque 
for the unified art work of the Victorian novel, the  eponymous hero pauses 
to name the books he read when he was young—and they are  all the spawn of 
Cervantes: Gil Blas, Tobias  Smollett's stories of Roderick Random, Peregrine 
Pickle, and Humphrey  Clinker. Even Tom Jones, The Vicar of Wakefield, and 
Robinson  Crusoe, in the way David describes reading them as imaginary (and  
sexually innocent) journeys fulfilling the child's desperate desire to 
escape.  Oppressed by his mother's new husband, the young David retreats to  
reading—"reading as if for life," in Dickens' beautiful phrase—in the 
picaresque  books that are his only inheritance from his father. 
And even while Dickens reveals the influence of Don Quixote on the 
beginnings of the modern novel,  Cervantes' metafictional play may actually 
prove to 
have had a greater effect on  the final years of the modern novel, a key 
element in the creation of postmodern  picaresques from William Burroughs' 
Naked Lunch  (1959) to David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest  (1996). Left aside 
is much claim of Cervantes' influence between the early  formation of the 
novel and the late rise of postmodernism—much claim of  Cervantes' influence 
during the central period of the modern novel's cultural  importance. 
To readers trained by the success of the English novel from Jane  Austen to 
Virginia Woolf, Don Quixote will seem  least modern in precisely the 
feature that leads historians to call it modern:  its turn against the failures 
and oddities of late medieval culture. The book's  primary literary device is 
mockery—and thus a kind of acknowledgment—of its  predecessors in the 
proto-novels of the heroic late-medieval Romances and such  Pastorals as 
Sannazaro's 1480 poetic Arcadia and  Montemayor's 1559 prose Diana. 
Not all the world was pleased. In the poetry of Don Juan, for example, 
Byron indulges a digression to  bemoan the loss of the Romances in Don 
Quixote's 
 laughter. But complain as Byron might, the simple fact is that Cervantes 
won,  his work too good not to provide us with permanently comic lenses 
through which  to view that lost time. And as heirs to modernity's early 
victories, the artists  of 18th-century England no longer had to spend much 
time 
contemplating their  escape from the comic failures of the late Middle Ages. 
The original gothic  novels, from Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto  
(1764) through Jane Austen's parody in Northanger  Abbey (1818), actually 
emerge 
from a sentimental hunger for the  supernatural thickness of lost 
medievalism. 
Meanwhile, in the main line of the English novel—in the works of  Watt's 
central figures—the comic and tragic possibilities of the new age proved  too 
interesting in themselves to bother much with attacking a distant and  
defeated age. Robinson Crusoe, Clarissa, and Tom Jones are  modern because they 
dwell in the modern present, not because they spend much  time mocking their 
culture's premodern past. They don't need to indulge  Cervantes' extended 
disparaging or correcting of the late medieval era. 
The smoke of the 18th-century English battles that involved  Catholicism, 
from the Jacobite Rising of 1745 to the Gordon Riots of 1780, can  hide from 
us the extent to which much of middle-class Britain (which is to say,  
England's class of novel readers and writers) heaved a great sigh of relief at  
the Protestant settlements of William and Mary. After the Glorious Revolution 
in  1688, novels were free to be modern, the old medieval systems 
unimportant to an  English Protestantism that had made its peace with—no, that 
was  
creating and sustaining—what they perceived as the modern  world. 
Perhaps the point could best be phrased this way: Don Quixote is 
undoubtedly the door by which we came to  the modern novel. But doors, one 
remembers, 
do not belong entirely to the rooms  we enter through them. On the other 
side, they are part of the rooms we leave  behind. And what we enter, after Don 
Quixote, is the  English novel of the 18th and 19th centuries, by which the 
rest of the world's  novelists would be formed. The novel, in other words, 
as modern. And the novel  as Protestant, all the way down. 
3.
The history of the novel gives us any  number of explicitly, deliberately, 
determinedly Protestant book-length  stories—just as it gives us any number 
of extended prose fictions that promote  an explicit, deliberate, and 
determined Catholicism. Or Marxism. Or feminism,  atheism, fascism, 
libertarianism, and extraterrestrialism, for that matter. 
And as far as those vocally Protestant works go, we can probably  set aside 
the ones with such a loud didactic purpose that they seem thereby  
overwhelmed as novels—although we would have to acknowledge the hypocrisy of  
disdaining openly religious Protestant teaching while refusing to let  
didacticism 
disqualify other novels, from Les  Misérables, Middlemarch, and Uncle Tom's 
Cabin (whose anti-slavery moral is itself  almost overpowered by the book's 
Protestant sermons) to Lady Chatterly's Lover, The Grapes of  Wrath, and 
Catch-22 (its anti-war message  once mocked by the poet Philip Larkin as "the 
American hymn to cowardice"). 
We can recognize, in other words, a set of moralizing Protestant  books 
that seem to contain little in their plotting, prose, or psychological  
observations to recommend them beyond their edifying purpose. Charles M.  
Sheldon's 
Christian fable In His Steps: "What Would Jesus  Do?" (1896), for example: 
a book that sold 30 million copies in its day.  In a perfect world, we would 
have time to read together the neglected  book-length fiction published by 
the Religious Tract Society, discussing in  detail Evelyn E. Green's The 
Head of the House: A Story of  Victory over Passion and Pride (1888) and Mrs. 
Walton's Little Faith; Or, The Child of the Toy Stall (1880). But  not today. 
Even on a much higher literary level, authors can seem  didactically 
Protestant when they indulge an explicit anti-Catholicism—as, for  example, 
Charlotte Brontë does in her 1853 novel Villette. Brontë had gone to Belgium to 
study a decade  earlier, paying for her schooling by tutoring students in 
English. In Villette, she draws on the experience to show her English  readers 
something of what modern European Catholicism looks like in all its  rich, 
thick, and horrifying attraction. "Lucy Snowe," Brontë names her  
semi-autobiographical heroine, a young Englishwoman teaching on the Continent.  
And 
after Lucy may (or may not) have encountered the ghost of an unchaste nun  who 
had been buried alive on the old convent's grounds—eventually, in a highly  
charged scene, finding the nun's habit in her own chaste bed—she announces, 
"God  is not with Rome." Is it any surprise that Lucy decides against the 
Catholic  conversion to which she had been urged by Paul Emanuel, her love 
interest and  the figure who may (or may not) have drowned in what Brontë 
herself described as  the "little puzzle" of the novel's strange ending? 
Of course, Villette has in mind more  than just its heroine's decision 
against godless Rome. The nuanced psychology of  the novel—the constricted 
Lucy, 
holding together her loves, her hates, and her  sufferings—may be the high 
point of Brontë's art. Certainly it is what led both  George Eliot and 
Virginia Woolf to declare Villette,  even with its gothic elements, superior to 
the earlier Jane  Eyre (1847). 
But neither can we simply dismiss as merely a Protestant religious  tract 
something like Charlotte Yonge's The Heir of  Redclyffe, another novel with 
anti-Catholic elements from that same year  of 1853. The feminist revolution 
in criticism over recent decades has had the  good effect of bringing back 
into print neglected women writers, even when they  do not much support a 
feminist reading of literature, and Yonge's reputation has  risen as critics 
have newly encountered such surprisingly good work as her 1856  children's 
book The Daisy Chain. Yonge's The Heir of Redclyffe, an enormous bestseller in 
Britain,  may have been started as purely a didactic story by its serious 
High Church  author. But along the way it manages a clever inversion of 
Romantic literature,  with the Byronic loner recast as Christian hero—his 
secret 
virtues isolating him  from the world just as surely as secret vices might 
have. In an (admittedly  offhand) remark about the dreadful books that passed 
for "worthy" popular  fiction, Henry James confessed, "Occasionally, like 
The  Heir of Redclyffe, they almost legitimate themselves by the force of  
genius." 
Even without much mention of rejected Catholicism, a resolutely  Protestant 
setting can convey a didactic tone. It's true that such settings have  been 
used to attack Protestant sects. You can find it in Dickens' mockery of the 
 evangelical chapels, signaled even in his first fiction, The Pickwick 
Papers (1837), with the comic Reverend  Stiggins. You can find it, for that 
matter, in books from James Hogg's Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1842) to 
(the Catholic)  Flannery O'Connor's Wise Blood (1952), both of which  can be 
read as disturbing satires of certain forms of Protestantism. Still, it's  
hard not to notice the sectarian lesson in, for example, the all-embracing  
Protestant atmosphere of Louisa May Alcott's Little  Women (1869), which 
opens with the March girls acting out Pilgrim's Progress while their clergyman 
father is off  ministering to the Union forces fighting in what Alcott 
understands as the Civil  War's great Protestant crusade for abolition. Even 
Mansfield Park (1814) uses the assumption of an advancing  Wesleyan-tinged 
Protestantism to resolve the moral collapse of a family made  wealthy by the 
West 
Indies slave trade—and the novel, together with Emma (1815), marks the 
broadening of Jane Austen's  extraordinary art to reach even the political 
condition of England and the  nation's spiritual character. 
In discussions of Protestant stories, Harold Frederic's curious  1896 work, 
The Damnation of Theron Ware, is  sometimes mentioned: a book with a 
definite religious purpose, for all that it  is shaped as a novel. Even after 
the 
flood of religious-doubt fiction in the  1880s—The Autobiography of Mark 
Rutherford, Walter  Pater's Marius the Epicurean, Mrs. Humphry Ward's  
bestselling Robert Elsmere—the novel of "loss (with  possible regaining) of 
faith" 
continued to be a well-defined category of  Victorian literature. For that 
matter, attacks on the failures and hypocrisies  of Christian clergy remain an 
artistic pastime down to the present day. And thus  it's possible to read 
The Damnation of Theron Ware  in the religious-doubt line of Samuel Butler's 
The Way of  All Flesh (1903) or even in the hypocritical-preacher line of 
Sinclair  Lewis' Elmer Gantry (1927), either of which would  make more complex 
the book's message. Nevertheless, Frederic's eccentric book is  not quite 
what we would want for an archetypal Protestant novel—which is why,  perhaps, 
it remains less read even than the other titles that appear with it on  
lists of neglected American classics. 
So, let's think a little about mainline, mainstream works,  undeniable 
instances of the art form. From the pastor Fritz Kruppenbach in Rabbit, Run 
(1960) through the theologian Roger Lambert in  Roger's Version (1986) and the 
preacher Clarence  Wilmot in In the Beauty of the Lilies (1996)—to say  
nothing of the philandering Reverend Tom Marshfield in A  Month of Sundays 
(1975), a book thick with references to Nathaniel  Hawthorne and The Scarlet 
Letter
—John Updike often  gives prominent place to Protestant religious figures. 
Are his novels therefore  particularly Protestant? "If there was ever such a 
species as the Protestant  novelist," the self-described "Catholic 
agnostic" novelist David Lodge has  insisted, "Mr. Updike may be its last 
surviving 
example." 
And what about that ur-American novel itself, Hawthorne's The Scarlet 
Letter (1850), far more the foundation of a  literature of national 
self-understanding, I am convinced, than the often-cited  Moby-Dick (1851) or 
Huckleberry 
 Finn (1884)? Do we see The Scarlet Letter as  a particularly Protestant 
book, with its setting among Boston's 17th-century  Puritans and its figure of 
the Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale? Or see The Warden (1855) that way, the book 
with which Anthony  Trollope began his Barsetshire chronicles of Anglican 
clergy? Or the letters of  the fictional Reverend John Ames, with which 
Marilynne Robinson constructed  Gilead (2004)? 
For all of them, the answer is obviously yes—and yet, no. These  books are 
Protestant in the sense that they contain explicitly Protestant  settings. 
Protestant, for that matter, in the sense that they were written by  
practicing Protestants. And Protestant in the sense that they show the  
psychological, social, and metaphysical effects of Protestant  theology.
 
Setting alone, however, is not enough to define a novel, or we  would be 
forced to count Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago  (1957), Grossman's Life and Fate 
(1959), and  Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the Life of Ivan  Denisovich (1962) as 
Communist novels simply because of their setting in  the Soviet Union. 
Similarly, the religion of the author does not necessarily  determine the book, 
else innumerable works written in the days of the Protestant  establishment 
in Britain and the United States—everything from Gulliver's Travels (1726) 
to To Kill  a Mockingbird (1960)—would automatically be defined as Protestant 
simply  because their authors were practicing Protestants of one degree or 
another, even  though the books offer little explicitly Protestant content 
and often only cold  comfort for Protestant readers. Finally, if we are to 
take as the defining  feature an investigation of the modern world that 
Protestant ideas helped  create, then nearly all novels, the central stream of 
the 
art form, would be  Protestant—which makes Protestantism the genus of the 
novel itself, rather than  something identifying a particular species of 
novels. 
4.
But that point, Protestantism as the genus  of the modern novel, is where 
we have been heading all along. In The Rise of the Novel, Ian Watt claims 
Fanny Burney as an  important figure in the history of the art form, reaching 
with her satirical  1778 Evelina toward what Jane Austen would perfect:  a 
joining of two arms of the early British novel. While Samuel Richardson showed 
 us the "minute presentation of daily life," Henry Fielding gave us a 
"detached  attitude" in the narrative voice, allowing the narrator to tell the 
story from  "a comic and objective point of view." Burney's insight and 
Austen's genius, in  Watt's interpretation, lie in finding a way to combine the 
two. 
Noting what Watt would call the narrative voice of "some august  and 
impersonal spirit of social and psychological understanding," C. S. Lewis  and 
many others have claimed for Jane Austen the tone of Samuel Johnson, in the  
calm and classical modes of both Johnson's irony and Johnson's assured 
morality.  But Austen is not a moralizer, however morally assured she is. G .K. 
Chesterton  once joked that Charles Dickens had for his characters the fondness 
with which a  father looks at his children, while H. G. Wells had for his 
characters the  fondness with which a butcher looks at a pig. There's 
something to that, a nice  way to divide all authors—and while Jane Austen is 
clearly fond of her  strong-willed heroines, she does have more than a little 
of 
the butcher's eye,  which she learned not from Samuel Johnson but from Henry 
Fielding. 
Nonetheless, as Harold Bloom intelligently observes, Austen  descends in a 
far more direct line from Richardson's Clarissa (1748) than from Fielding's 
Tom Jones (1749), just as she is in turn the direct  ancestor of George 
Eliot and Henry James, rather than of Thackeray and Dickens:  "Doubtless, 
Austen's religious ideas were as profound as Samuel Richardson's  were 
shallow," 
Bloom notes, but Emma and Clarissa are alike in being deeply "Protestant 
novels  without being in any way religious." 
Not that the other early line of the English novel, the one that  flows 
from Fielding, is un- or anti-Protestant. The Thackeray revealed in his  
letters seems, at best, an ambiguous believer. But he was delighted when he  
stumbled on the Pilgrim's Progress title for Vanity Fair (1848), and rightly 
so. 
The reference to John  Bunyan's spiritual classic helped him shape the novel 
away from being the kind  of digression-filled picaresque he always loved 
and toward being a leading early  example of the Victorian unified art. 
Charlotte Brontë would dedicate Jane Eyre to him during the magazine 
serialization of  Vanity Fair, discerning even in the unfinished story  a 
complete and 
coherent satire that assumes the truth of Christian virtues in  order to 
expose the hypocrisy of a British Christian society that fails to  practice 
what 
it mouths in such pious tones. 
One of the best ways to see the Protestant definition of the  Victorian 
novel—one of the best ways to see the Victorian novel however one  wants to 
define it—is to abandon the Edwardians' adolescent sneer that their  Victorian 
Christian parents and grandparents were the most hypocritical people  who 
ever lived. Not only is the Western understanding of the vice of hypocrisy  
shaped by its biblical expression, but the actual writings of the Victorians  
demonstrate the opposite of what the Edwardians supposed and inscribed in 
us,  their descendants, as the proper scornful picture of those Victorians. 
In truth, never was there a people more obsessed with identifying  and 
rooting out hypocrisy in all its ever-more minute forms. They wrote about it  
so 
much because it bothered them so much. The early Oliver  Twist (1838) is 
not as highly regarded by critics as Dickens' later work,  but toward the end 
it contains a scene of unexpectedly acute psychological  observation as Bill 
Sikes attempts to lose himself, to forget the guilt of his  killing of 
Nancy, in heroically fighting a house fire. It's an authorial  courtesy to a 
character that suggests Dickens was willing to treat even a  murderer with 
sympathy—a courtesy he refused to pay the hypocrites who ran the  poorhouse. 
The 
sin of hypocrisy burns like Satan's signal-fire for the Victorian  
novelists. Not for them the saturnine sophistication of the Continental  
aphorists 
or the Catholic cultures' droll shrug at insincerity and pretense, the  
comedy of the Goliard poets and Rabelais derived ultimately from the ex  opere 
operato principle of sacramental theology. 
In other words, the Victorians wanted a clean world, an honest  world, and 
their novelistic social concern aims at little else. Of course, in  
rejecting hypocrisy, one can either denounce the behavior or reject the ideal  
that 
the behavior fails to match. The Edwardians and post-Edwardians often used  
the fact of hypocrisy as an argument for abolishing the entire ideal frame 
of  the culture. But the robust line of Victorian writers, the heirs of 
Fielding,  typically used their obsession with hypocrisy to demand reformation 
of 
the  behavior. 
Observing such figures as the always-moral Cheeryble brothers in  Nicholas 
Nickleby and the  moral-after-being-visited-by-ghosts Scrooge in A Christmas 
 Carol, both George Orwell and the usually excellent French critic Louis  
Cazamian (thanked by Ian Watt in the preface to The Rise of  the Novel) 
object that, in documenting personal evil, Dickens closed his  eyes to the 
structural problems of social evil. The benighted novelist seemed to  demand 
only 
the improbable conversion of individuals—a philosophie de  Noël, as Cazamian 
scoffed. 
Part of that 20th-century complaint derives simply from its era, a  time in 
which much experience of art was forced into the categories of socialist  
dogma, and Victorian work like Dickens' had to be read mostly as failed  
novelizations of Engels' The Condition of the Working Class  in England in 
1844. 
But in fact, in his focus on the individual rather  than the complete 
economic restructuring of the modern world, Dickens was very  much 
instantiating 
a Protestant insight into morality, derived from a Protestant  metaphysics. 
However powerfully our society controls us, it is an epiphenomenon  created 
by the metaphysical drama of the soul. However completely our culture  
shapes us, it is, on the cosmic scale, only the prismatic spray tossed up by  
individuals acting out their individual salvation plays. Where, except in the  
reformation of many separate selves, could we find a solid basis for change 
in  their society and culture? The nation remains important, particularly 
in its  role as educator: "This boy is Ignorance. This girl is Want," the 
second ghost  tells Scrooge. "Beware them both, and all of their degree, but 
most of all  beware this boy, for on his brow I see that written which is 
Doom." But the  nation is not the actual object of grace and salvation. Only 
the 
individual soul  has true metaphysical weight and consequence, and the 
novel is the story of a  soul's journey. 
5.
If the individual soul's journey  increasingly defines the social line of 
the English novel from Fielding through  the 18th-century picaresques of 
Smollett and on to Thackeray and  Dickens—together with writers as diverse as 
Mrs. Gaskell, Mark Twain, and James  Joyce; novels as different as Moby-Dick, 
Crime and Punishment, and Herzog—so even more does it define the personal 
line that  runs from Richardson through Jane Austen and Henry James and down 
to Alice  Walker and innumerable others. 
I confess there's something in this kind of novel I find tedious.  Austen 
and James, many others in the Richardson line, are beyond carping; to  prefer 
Dickens to them is as individually revealing and critically pointless as  
preferring the planet Mercury to the planet Mars. Still, I do prefer 
Wuthering Heights to Jane  Eyre, War and Peace to Madame Bovary, Death Comes 
for the 
 Archbishop to The Awakening (and Rabelais to  them all). Reading even much 
of Virginia Woolf, I find myself tiring of the  relentless search inside 
the psyche, the endless dwelling on internal reality,  as though feelings and 
thoughts about the self were as important and interesting  as actions and 
thoughts about the external universe. 
Except that feelings and thoughts about the self actually  are important. 
They were important even in the premodern Aristotelian  and Stoic rational 
accounts of the good life, although they were understood  mostly as tools: 
instruments to be left behind once virtue had been achieved.  And feelings and 
internal consciousness become more than important—they become  vital—in the 
modern turn to the self. 
This is what the novel as an art form emerged to address, and what  the 
novel as an art form encouraged into ever-greater growth. The inner life,  
self-consciousness as self-understanding, becomes the manifestation of virtue  
and the path for grasping salvation. It's there in 1813 when Jane Austen has  
Elizabeth Bennett declare, "Till this moment I never knew myself," at the 
great  turning point of Pride and Prejudice, and it's there  in 1908 when E. 
M. Forster has Lucy Honeychurch exclaim that she has at last  seen for 
herself "the whole of everything at once," at the great turning point  of A 
Room 
with a View—Forster's most Austen-like  book, intended (as he described it 
in his diary) to be "clear, bright, and well  constructed." 
Plenty of novels, and perhaps the majority of stories told outside  the 
novel tradition, lack thick characters with revealed interior lives. In much  
of the genre fiction of our time—science fiction, mysteries, and thrillers;  
romances, westerns, and Napoleonic War sea-stories, for that matter—the 
thinness  of the characters can be a benefit, keeping clear the fact that those 
characters  are acting in a kind of chanson de geste: They instantiate 
recognizable  types, and they perform iconic actions. In the roman tradition 
(which  is to say, in the central stream of the modern novel), the characters 
are  generally required to be fuller: to have unique and individual interior 
lives.  They are required to be realistic, the novelists say, although the  
range of novelistic interior lives contains its own share of well-defined  
types. 
More to the point, such books seek to explain (and by explaining,  validate 
and make ever more central) the kind of distinct and self-conscious  self 
whose invention in modernity is suggested by its absence in previous  
literature. This is why we hesitate, backing and filling a little, before 
naming  
as novels such ironic 18th-century chanson fiction as Voltaire's Candide and 
Samuel Johnson's Rasselas, but do not  hesitate at all to give the name to 
Sarah Fielding's relatively minor book of  roman fiction, The Countess of  
Dellwyn—although all three were published in the same year, 1759, 40  years 
after Robinson Crusoe and 150 years after  Don Quixote. 
The self-investigation of the self, the attempt to discern the  truth 
amidst the clash of feelings with perceptions of social and physical  reality, 
emerges as the proper spiritual journey of individuals and the true  
rightwising of their souls: Pilgrim's Progress,  rewritten in 
self-consciousness. 
This is the purest stream of the modern novel,  however much we like Dickens—
however much we understand the outward  peregrinations of Nicholas Nickleby, 
David Copperfield, and Pip Pirrip as  reflecting an inward journey toward 
mature self-understanding. And this stream  has its wellspring in Clarissa 
Harlowe. 
When Samuel Richardson began publishing Clarissa in 1748, he was determined 
to compose a story  that responded to the charges of licentiousness against 
his 1740 novel Pamela (and to Fielding's mockery in his 1741 parody 
Shamela). Subtitled Virtue Rewarded,  Pamela ends with the heroine's successful 
marriage as she reforms her  former jailer and converts him into a true 
husband. And yet, Clarissa is the more triumphant book, even though it  
culminates 
in its heroine's death. Clarissa Harlowe's virtues are the stronger  for 
their not being rewarded, the more edifying for belonging to her  alone. 
We tend to remember only Clarissa's long struggle to keep her  integrity 
despite the selfish machinations of her family, and her long struggle  to keep 
her chastity while held prisoner by a man willing to use even drugs and  
rape to bring her body, her mind, and her will into his possession. But  
Richardson devotes most of the final third of the enormously long epistolary  
book to Clarissa after her final escape from Lovelace: 300,000 words  given 
over to her damaged health and consequent death. And why not? It's here  that 
Clarissa reaches her clearest expressions of her strength and her will to  be 
true to her ideal self. 
The heroine of Pamela wants to keep  her sexual integrity, yes, but she 
also wants to change others and modify the  world to match her own virtue, 
returning to marry the contrite Mr. B in the  second half of the book. The 
heroine of Clarissa is  a far more passive character, externally, just as she 
is 
a far more active  character, internally—which makes her the original behind 
Jane Austen's Fanny  Price, Charlotte Brontë's Lucy Snowe, and Virginia 
Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway (whose  first name is also Clarissa). Richardson's 
Clarissa Harlowe demands no real  change of heart in anyone else, and she seeks 
to 
modify the world only insofar  as she needs that world to leave her alone. 
Of course, the consequence is that she would burn to the ground  everything 
around her, if that's what it takes to be left to herself—and she  nearly 
does: No one who tries to manipulate or use her escapes the encounter  with 
Clarissa unscathed. But that is as must be. The "divine Clarissa" has  
serious internal business to do: the willing of herself into self-integrity, a  
matching of her self-understanding and self-possession to the virtuous pattern 
 of the salvation to which she has been elected. For most of the novel, she 
 either does not understand or does not care that her breathtaking 
loveliness is  itself a force in the world, sexually active in ways she does 
not 
wish to be. In  the long time of her dying, however—as the conversion of the 
rake John Belford  into her defender proves—Clarissa's pale beauty is 
clarified beyond sexual  attractiveness into a pure expression of her 
sanctification. No wonder Lovelace,  shot in a duel with another of Clarissa's 
defenders, 
dies with the prayer "let  this expiate" on his lips. 
I don't know what more a reader could want for a Protestant art  form. And 
there Clarissa sits, a million words near  the beginning of the literature: 
the defining wellspring, the inescapable  origin, of one of the few streams 
down which the entire modern project of the  novel will run. 
6.
It's curious that while we can speak, at  least in a loose way, of the 
Richardson line and the Fielding line in the  English novel, it is almost 
impossible to draw from Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe any direct influence on 
the 
serious works  of the art form. But still, somehow, everyone agrees that 
the novel occupies an  enormous place in the foundation of the new literature. 
The set of books known as "Robinsonades" obviously does owe its  existence 
to Robinson Crusoe. Often appearing as  children's books, the genre runs 
from The Female  American (1767) through The Swiss Family  Robinson (1812) to—
oh, I don't know, R. M. Ballantyne's The Coral Island (1857), I suppose, or 
Jules Verne's Castaways of the Flag (1900) or wherever one arbitrarily  stops 
counting. But these books typically manage to be descendants of Defoe only  
in the gross sense of imitating the deserted-island setting and the plot of 
 systematic organization of the means of survival, using modern knowledge 
in a  primitive place. The Swiss Family Robinson, for  example, is Protestant 
work of a kind, in that it was written by a Swiss pastor  and contains 
regular notice that the shipwrecked family is pious and often  prays. But only 
incidentally does the story contain the Protestant view of the  self that 
Robinson Crusoe gave the genre of the  novel, and never does it reach toward 
the deeper interior journey with which  Defoe infused his own work. Not even 
the Robinsonades, the self-declared  imitators, follow the moral aim (or the 
imprecise prose and awkward structure,  for that matter) that Defoe gave his 
novel. In many ways, Robinson Crusoe is an isolated oddity in the history 
of  the English novel. 
And yet, it is also, by universal critical agreement, one of the  most 
consequential English novels ever written. Perhaps we can resolve the  
contradiction by suggesting that the 1719 Robinson  Crusoe comes to us as 
something 
like the ground on which Clarissa could begin to flow in 1748 and Tom Jones 
in 1749: not a stream itself, but the necessary  condition for the 
possibility of those streams. And the ground is defined in the  novel's 
earliest 
moments, when Crusoe admits, "I was to be the willful Agent of  all my own 
Miseries"—rejecting his father's advice to enter business and going  instead to 
sea in what he calls his "Original Sin." 
If Clarissa is a tale of  sanctification, then Robinson Crusoe is the  
necessary prior story: a tale of salvation and awareness of being born again.  
The isolated hero learns to see as "the Work of Providence" all that has  
happened to him—and thereby becomes master of the island on which he is  
stranded. Nearly dying of fever in the summer of 1660, he offers "the first  
Prayer, if I may call it so, that I had made for many Years." And as he  
recovers, we reach the central moment of the novel. Robinson Crusoe finally 
reads 
the Bible he has brought  from the wrecked ship, and—without a church 
community or a teacher to aid him,  sheerly from the power of the divine text 
itself 
on an individual conscience—he  writes, "I threw down the Book, and with my 
Heart as well as my Hands lifted up  to Heaven, in a kind of Extasy of Joy, 
I cry'd out aloud, Jesus, thou Son of  David, Jesus, thou exalted Prince 
and Saviour, give me Repentance!" (It would be  interesting, if beyond our 
scope here, to think about Protestant art's use of  the spiritual memories of 
childhood, that old-time religion, to provide what  Catholics would 
understand as the interpretive guides of ecclesial tradition and  the deposit 
of 
faith.) 
As the critic Philip Zaleski observes, it was once common to read  Robinson 
Crusoe this way—to take the novel as it  takes itself: a Presbyterian tale 
of redemption revealed to its hero by  adversity, in God's great plan and 
care for the individual sinner. Perhaps  Defoe's religious sense suggested 
writing a story of isolation, or perhaps the  author merely began a story of 
isolation (inspired by the nonfiction 1712  accounts of Alexander Selkirk's 
adventures) and found thereby a way to express  his religious sense. 
Regardless, he created with Crusoe's island something like  the ideal 
novelistic 
setting for a tale of a Protestant worldview: The journey  of the self is the 
deepest, truest thing in the universe, and the individual  soul's salvation is 
the great metaphysical drama played out on the world's  stage. Could 
Clarissa Harlowe have been as isolated in herself, if Robinson  Crusoe had not 
first been shipwrecked alone on his island? 
Unfortunately, Karl Marx, not otherwise known for his literary  criticism, 
used Robinson Crusoe as a model text of  modernity in his 1867 Das Kapital—
writing, "Of his  prayers and the like we take no account." And thereby Marx 
established a new  standard way to read the novel. Robinson Crusoe, we  were 
all to understand, was an account of the economics of modernity's rising  
middle class and its effect on the West's imperial expansion. 
The genius and impishness of Max Weber's 1905 The Protestant Ethic and the 
Spirit of Capitalism was that  it turned Marx on his head: The economic 
condition of the rising middle class  didn't create Protestantism, the book 
argued; Protestantism created the  conditions necessary for capitalism, and 
culture is driven, even in its economic  forms, by religion and spiritual 
anxiety. But Weber's work did not provide a  rescue for Robinson Crusoe. By the 
time we reach R.  H. Tawney's much more British-centered 1926 Religion and  
the Rise of Capitalism, Defoe's novel has become completely intertwined  with 
economic questions—until (as the critic Irvin Ehrenpreis pointed out) in  
mid-century the influential New Marxist critic György Lukács could  
systematically analyze the history of the novel as the history of bourgeois  
consciousness, with Defoe's central role "casually taken for granted." 
We shouldn't downplay Defoe's monetary fascinations; surpassing  even Jane 
Austen and Anthony Trollope, the man is rivaled in this respect only  by 
Benjamin Franklin and perhaps James Joyce in Ulysses. From Robinson Crusoe  to 
Roxanna, Defoe was always convinced that he was  revealing something 
important about his characters by recounting down to the  farthing the money in 
their pockets. But that kind of bookkeeping is neither the  center of the novel 
nor, really, the gift Defoe gave the subsequent history of  the art form. 
It is, in a sense, only the dross of a setting at a particular  time, like 
the rest of the social, political, and cultural facts  circumstantially known 
to the author because he happens to be writing in a  certain era. 
What Robinson Crusoe provides the form  of the novel comes rather from its 
sense of purpose. The individual figures in  novels undergo travails and 
adventures—whether comic, bawdy, and ironic (as in  Fielding's 1749 Tom Jones) 
or more tragicomically  serious (as in his 1751 Amelia)—all aiming toward  
resolving their external situation by revealing its parallels with the  
characters' internal situation. Before Robinson  Crusoe, we could have 
something 
like the 1715 French Gil Blas, the picaresque of one thing after another, 
but  afterward we get the English revision that gradually remakes the European 
novel  of action, from Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield  in 1766 to 
Thackeray's The Luck of Barry Lyndon in  1844. 
With all its awkward proto-novel carelessness, wordiness, and  clunky 
digression, Robinson Crusoe is far from  possessing the great ambition of a 
unified art form at which the High Victorian  novels aimed. Nonetheless, with 
Defoe, we arrive at the modern novel in its  essence: a deeply Protestant book 
about the great journey, the only story that  is metaphysically true, of the 
individual soul struggling with itself in this  world that God, in his 
Providence, has made. 
7.
In a 2013 essay about Catholicism and the  arts, the poet Dana Gioia wrote, 
"Catholic literature is rarely pious. In ways  that sometimes trouble or 
puzzle both Protestant and secular readers, Catholic  writing tends to be 
comic, rowdy, rude, and even violent." And in a brief online  reply, the 
Protestant theologian D. G. Hart suggested that "perhaps the problem  is that 
Protestants are too devout and guard what qualifies as genuinely  Christian 
while 
non-Protestant Christians are more used to the big tent of  mixing and 
matching." Admitting "the paucity of Protestant novelists"—by which  he seems 
to 
mean something like the difficulty he would have assembling a  Protestant 
parallel to Gioia's list of Catholic writers—Hart concluded with a  dismissal 
of both Gioia and the project of identifying religious fiction:  
"Protestants intuitively know (but often refuse to admit) that novels don't 
need  to 
be Christian, that the question of whether a novel is Christian is actually  
silly." 
Silly is a curious word to use for  either Gioia's particular study or the 
more general search for the truths of  Christianity in a major art form of 
Western Christendom for nearly three  centuries—especially when the complaint 
is made by someone writing in English.  The greatest contributions of Great 
Britain and the United States to the arts  have come in literature, after 
all. We could lose the paintings of all  Anglophones, just as we could lose 
their classical-music compositions, without  absolutely terminal damage to 
the history of those arts. But the novel would be  destroyed beyond repair. 
Still, D. G. Hart is not exactly wrong. Novels don't  need to seem especially 
Christian to Protestant readers and writers, because the  novel itself is a 
Protestant-inflected art form—always influenced by the  definitions it 
obtained from its birth in English literature as a central art of  Western 
culture: the device by which, more than any other, modernity tried to  
understand 
itself. 
To write a Catholic novel is thus to attempt something a little  tricky, a 
little verging on the self-contradictory. And when a Catholic-aiming  novel 
fails, it typically fails because it is at war with its own form. So, for  
instance, G. K. Chesterton's small disaster The Man Who Was  Thursday (1908): 
a piece of allegorical fiction possessing many wonderful  characteristics, 
without "being coherent as a novel" among them. John Kennedy  Toole's 1980 
Catholic comedy A Confederacy of Dunces  is often described as Rabelaisian, 
but the term is accurate only relative to  other modern fiction. In hard 
truth, we cannot simply go back to Rabelais and  start over, pretending the 
march of modernity and the parallel histories of the  novel and the self hadn't 
happened (much as I, as a Catholic reader, wish that  we could; much as it's 
possible to interpret several late-20th-century literary  movements, 
especially magic realism, as attempts at that return). 
To write a Protestant novel is, instead, to do something a little  
unnecessary, a little verging on the redundant. And when a deliberately  
Protestant 
novel fails, it often fails because it seems didactic and preachy,  engaged 
in what the art form itself promises that readers can take for granted.  
Hesba Stretton's Little Meg's Children (1868) is  unbearable now, however 
worthy the lessons of the book may be: its tale of the  abuse of poor children 
overrun by its sermons on Evangelical religion. Oliver Twist does the greater 
Protestant work with less  concern for Protestant catechetics. 
Many different campgrounds and overlooks, enclaves and inns, are  available 
for writers as they walk the paths of the novel, and Gioia is surely  right 
that the Catholic one remains interestingly large and robust. But the land  
itself is Protestant territory. Modernity's sense of the self owes a great 
deal  to the philosophers, from Descartes to Kant, who theorized about it. 
But that  sense of self owes even more to the novel as an art form—a form 
created,  defined, and sent on its way, everywhere in the world, by 
English-language  authors confidently breathing a Protestant air. 
And as the atmosphere grows thinner and thinner in the West, as  confidence 
fails, where shall we seek our future arts, our future  selves?

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