The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters is a history of literary criticism in Great Britain. A pause
is necessary to observe the overproduction of criticism. We not only have
critics whose purpose it is to examine, in excruciating detail, the poetry and prose
which should be dedicated to pleasure; but we also have an additional layer of historian
critics like Gross, who study past critics, who studied the writers. John
Gross is aware of this professional excess. He asks “how can anyone who tries
to keep up with Wordsworthian studies find time to read Wordsworth?” This
reviewer admits that he is not making the process any less confounded. His
brain twists as he critically reviews a book, which critically reviews the
critics, who critically reviewed the writers of literature. In spite of
this problem, it is the author’s job, as a literary historian, to record and
interpret history. The lives of the critics and the development of the British
periodical press is history. Additionally, it is the job of the reviewer to review
books. So, amusingly and vertiginously, on we go. Of note, some social and
political criticism is included by the historic critics explored here, but the
primary object of study, in this tome, is literature.
John Gross offers a chronological trek of mini-biographies,
which begin in 1802 with Lord Jeffrey of the “Edinburgh Review,” and end in
1936 with F.R. Leavis. His epilogue quickly catches the reader up to Gross’s
“present time,” 1969, when Rise and Fall was published. Be
warned that this is an advanced course in literary criticism. For most general
non-fiction and history enthusiasts, (this reviewer included), the history of
literary criticism is unexplored terrain. A novice is expected to tread water
or sink. But, as someone who has gone through the process, this is not a bad
way to learn. It’s much like getting lost in a foreign city. As long as one
walks unafraid through the unknown, and is open to experiencing an entirely new
area, the opportunity for learning is great. If this form of self-education
appeals to a reader, then she will find, upon looking-up from Gross’s
exploration, that many hours have been lost in the reverie of discovering
history previously unmapped by the explorer. Thankfully, we have our internet
as a compass. Gross does cover well-known writers (Carlyle, Mill, Arnold, etc.)
but one will come across numerous obscure personalities or publications which
will require a google.
Apologies to my feminist readers: the subjects are
exclusively “men” of letters. There was, between 1800 and 1930, a strong
women’s periodical press in Britain. There were women writing as journalists
and critics. But Gross does not cover them. To make the situation as comical as
it may be infuriating to those conversant regarding gender discrimination, women
are almost exclusively mentioned in conjunction with the men in their lives.
Virginia Woolf is seen primarily as the daughter of Leslie Stephen. Katherine
Mansfield is only mentioned as John Middleton Murray’s lover. Queenie Leavis
doesn’t even get a first name, let alone a mini-biography. She was a formidable
critic in her own right who is relegated to the anonymity of being a “Mrs.
Leavis.”Only George Eliot is praised as a genius writer. Even so, she does not
rate a mini-biography for her critical works. The excuse of “well…it was 1969”
is not a good one. Our relegated Virginia Woolf wrote A Room of One’s Own,
on women and writing, in 1929. “The Woman Question,” or women’s place in the
literary world, had been debated in the academy since the 1950s, then radically
advocated since 1962 with the publication of The Feminine Mystique. John
Gross could hardly been unaware of these trends. There is a 1991 revision of Rise
and Fall, to which I do not have access. It purports to include “updates on
several literary careers”* If a reader can tell me that it also includes a
highly expanded coverage of the role of women, I will happily withdraw my
objection.
While the absence of women diminishes the study, it does not diminish
the individual portraits or the author’s able coloring of lives. Alice Walker
once described her process with The Color Purple where she spent a
summer sitting in a field, calling up the images of her characters in her mind
and having conversations with them as a way to get to know them. In this way,
she said, her “summer passed in a blaze of joy.” Similarly, if one appreciates
being introduced to obscure and idiosyncratic critics, their reading will also
pass in a blaze of joy.
Gross, John. The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters. New York:
The Macmillan Company, 1969.
*"The Rise and
Fall of the Man of Letters: English Literary Life Since 1800 First Paperback
Edition Edition." Amazon.com:
The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters: English Literary Life Since 1800
(9781566630009): John Gross: Books. Amazon.com, n.d. Web. 22 Aug. 2015.
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