Book contents
- Cormac McCarthy in Context
- Cormac McCarthy in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Part I Environments
- Part II Literary Contexts: Sources, Influences, Allusions
- Chapter 5 William Faulkner
- Chapter 6 Ernest Hemingway
- Chapter 7 Herman Melville and the American Romance Tradition
- Chapter 8 Romanticism
- Chapter 9 Naturalism
- Chapter 10 The Bible
- Chapter 11 Allusion and Allegory
- Part III Intellectual Contexts
- Part IV Social and Cultural Contexts
- Part V Archives, Critical History, Translation
- Works Cited
- Index
Chapter 9 - Naturalism
from Part II - Literary Contexts: Sources, Influences, Allusions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 December 2019
- Cormac McCarthy in Context
- Cormac McCarthy in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Part I Environments
- Part II Literary Contexts: Sources, Influences, Allusions
- Chapter 5 William Faulkner
- Chapter 6 Ernest Hemingway
- Chapter 7 Herman Melville and the American Romance Tradition
- Chapter 8 Romanticism
- Chapter 9 Naturalism
- Chapter 10 The Bible
- Chapter 11 Allusion and Allegory
- Part III Intellectual Contexts
- Part IV Social and Cultural Contexts
- Part V Archives, Critical History, Translation
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Critics have long debated the origins and influences on what might be called the McCarthian universe of violence. This chapter argues for a rethinking of the place of American literary naturalism – particularly the works of Stephen Crane, Frank Norris, Jack London, and Theodore Dreiser – as a key influence on McCarthy’s understanding of the omnipresence and inescapability of violence in human existence. Reading both McCarthy’s and the literary naturalists’ connections to the pessimistic philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer and the evolutionary theory of Charles Darwin in the mid-nineteenth century, the chapter marks striking similarities between the judge’s philosophy in Blood Meridian of “before man was, war waited for him” and the naturalist philosophy (as perhaps most purely articulated in Dreiser’s The Financier) that “life was war.” Both McCarthy and the naturalists, then, display an acceptance of a world and universe in which morality and justice no longer held any sway, violence, degradation, corruption, and indifference are the only constants, and human beings are little more than flickering, momentary flashes, either subject to or reveling in these violent characteristics.
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- Cormac McCarthy in Context , pp. 87 - 97Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020