Neoclassicism & Its Features
Introduction to
Neoclassicism
After the Renaissance--a period of
exploration and expansiveness--came a reaction in the direction of order and
restraint. Generally speaking, this reaction developed in France in the
mid-seventeenth century and in England thirty years later; and it dominated
European literature until the last part of the eighteenth century.
The New Restraint
Writers turned from inventing new
words to regularizing vocabulary and grammar. Complex, boldly metaphorical
language, such as Shakespeare used in his major tragedies, is clarified and
simplified--using fewer and more conventional figures of speech. Mystery and obscurity
are considered symptoms of incompetence rather than signs of grandeur. The
ideal style is lucid, polished, and precisely appropriate to the genre of a
work and the social position of its characters. Tragedy and high comedy, for
example, use the language of cultivated people and maintain a well-bred tone.
The crude humor of the gravediggers inHamlet or the pulling out of
Gloucester's eyes in King Lear would no longer be admitted in
tragedy. Structure, like tone, becomes more simple and unified. In contrast to
Shakespeare's plays, those of neoclassical playwrights such as Racine and
Moliere develop a single plot line and are strictly limited in time and place
(often, like Moliere's The Misanthrope and Tartuffe,
to a single setting and a single day's time).
Influence of the
Classics
The period is called neoclassical because
its writers looked back to the ideals and art forms of classical times,
emphasizing even more than their Renaissance predecessors the classical ideals
of order and rational control. Such simply constructed but perfect works as the
Parthenon and Sophocles' Antigone, such achievements as the peace
and order established by the Roman Empire (and celebrated in Book VI of
Vergil's Aeneid), suggest what neoclassical writers saw in the
classical world. Their respect for the past led them to be conservative both in
art and politics. Always aware of the conventions appropriate to each genre,
they modeled their works on classical masterpieces and heeded the
"rules" thought to be laid down by classical critics. In political
and social affairs, too, they were guided by the wisdom of the past:
traditional institutions had, at least, survived the test of time. No more than
their medieval and Renaissance predecessors did neoclassical thinkers share our
modern assumption that change means progress, since they believed that human
nature is imperfect, human achievements are necessarily limited, and therefore
human aims should be sensibly limited as well. It was better to set a moderate
goal, whether in art or society, and achieve it well, than to strive for an
infinite ideal and fail. Reasonable Philinte inThe Misanthrope does
not get angry at people's injustice, because he accepts human nature as
imperfect.
Neoclassical Assumptions
and Their Implications
Neoclassical thinkers could use the
past as a guide for the present because they assumed that human nature was
constant--essentially the same regardless of time and place. Art, they
believed, should express this essential nature: "Nothing can please many,
and please long, but just representations of general nature" (Samuel
Johnson). An individual character was valuable for what he or she revealed of
universal human nature. Of course, all great art has this sort of
significance--Johnson made his statement about Shakespeare. But neoclassical
artists more consciously emphasized common human characteristics over
individual differences, as we see in the type-named characters of Moliere.
If human nature has remained
constant over the centuries, it is unlikely that any startling new discoveries
will be made. Hence neoclassical artists did not strive to be original so much
as to express old truths in a newly effective way. As Alexander Pope, one of
their greatest poets, wrote: "True wit is nature to advantage dressed, /
What oft was thought, but ne'er so well expressed." Neoclassical writers
aimed to articulate general truth rather than unique vision, to communicate to others
more than to express themselves.
Social Themes
Neoclassical writers saw
themselves, as well as their readers and characters, above all as members of
society. Social institutions might be foolish or corrupt--indeed, given the
intrinsic limitations of human nature, they probably were--but the individual
who rebelled against custom or asserted his superiority to humankind was, like
Alceste in The Misanthrope, presented as presumptuous and absurd.
While Renaissance writers were sometimes fascinated by rebels, and later
Romantic artists often glorified them, neoclassical artists expected people to
conform to established social norms. For individual opinion was far less likely
to be true than was the consensus of society, developed over time and embodied
in custom and tradition. As the rules for proper writing should be followed, so
should the rules for civilized conduct in society. Neither Moliere nor Jane
Austen advocate blind following of convention, yet both insist that good
manners are important as a manifestation of self-control and consideration for
others.
The Age of Reason
The classical ideals of order and
moderation which inspired this period, its realistically limited aspirations,
and its emphasis on the common sense of society rather than individual
imagination, could all be characterized as rational. And, indeed, it is often
known as the Age of Reason. Reason had traditionally been assumed to be the
highest mental faculty, but in this period many thinkers considered it a
sufficient guide in all areas. Both religious belief and morality were grounded
on reason: revelation and grace were de-emphasized, and morality consisted of
acting rightly to one's fellow beings on this earth. John Locke, the most
influential philosopher of the age, analyzed logically how our minds function
(1690), argued for religious toleration (1689), and maintained that government
is justified not by divine right but by a "social contract" that is
broken if the people's natural rights are not respected.
As reason should guide human
individuals and societies, it should also direct artistic creation.
Neoclassical art is not meant to seem a spontaneous outpouring of emotion or
imagination. Emotion appears, of course; but it is consciously controlled. A
work of art should be logically organized and should advocate rational norms.
The Misanthrope, for example, is focused on its theme more consistently than
are any of Shakespeare's plays. Its hero and his society are judged according
to their conformity or lack of conformity to Reason, and its ideal, voiced by
Philinte, is the reasonable one of the golden mean. The cool rationality and
control characteristic of neoclassical art fostered wit, equally evident in the
regular couplets of Moliere and the balanced sentences of Austen.
Sharp and brilliant wit, produced
within the clearly defined ideals of neoclassical art, and focused on people in
their social context, make this perhaps the world's greatest age of comedy and
satire.
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