--... CAMPUS CINEMA: .. .what appeal to the student? THE NOUVEAU ROMAN A New Form in French Fiction Fights To Preserve Human Language (Continued from page two) to see? They have had some pretty bad stuff there already this year, and for all we know, it may be as bad as that free show, Metropolis.' Metropolis' was fun in a way, but you can't watch TV-Jeebees more than once a month." So, very few customers showed up at the Cinema Guild to see one of the best films to come to town this fall. The Cinema Guild is not dancing in a rain of gold this year and it is not going broke either. But expenses are being pared down wherever possible. The crowds are not attending the student-run movie emporeum. The fall program is better than it has been in several years, but the students are finding it worth their while, when they do have the time, to at- tend lectures given by people with more familiar names, such as Robert Frost (a few years ago) and Alain Robbes-Grillet (recently-and he gave the lecture in French). W HENHALF OF the students in a re- cent survey indicated that social life, athletics and extra-curricular activities were more important to them than aca- demics, we begin to acquire a factual basis on which to press the question of the existence of a younger generation really interested in the motion picture. More evidence is added when we realize there are pitifully few courses in the art of the film offered on campuses in the United States. Other nations have their own schools and academies usually on a state-supported basis, which teach the interested and aspiring addicts of the film the proper way to make a motion picture; the United States has few. This University offers exactly one course, cinematography, -to its students. It is given only one semester a year to twelve students at a time. Twelve students out of a campus population of 29,040 is a sorry figure, even if there were any real student interest in the motion picture. It is a sorry figure to have to present to those surveyors of the national scene in twentieth century America who point out that the motion picture is the seventh of the "lively arts" and of equal rank with the other performing arts. Most students will tell you that they can't afford to take a course in cinema- tography or take the time to attend the films that come to town-that a bad re- view turned them sour on the movie, that they couldn't get a date to see it with or that it just didn't seem very interesting. They offer a myriad of other excuses. The student at the university is not interest- ed in the motion picture. HERE ARE SEVERAL other reasons for the misconception that students are interested in the motion picture. It is thought that the usual collegiate and youthful enthusiasm and idealism car- ries over into the movies. Because the film does break tradition and goes against the usual art forms of the last thousand years, and because it is a new and mod- ern form of expressing ideas and emotion, people assume that the college student will embrace the motion picture as his primary mouthpiece. But he has not embraced it, he has not spoken through it, because it is unique in one unfortunate way-it is very ex- pensive. Thousands of dollars worth of equipment and material are needed to make a motion picture, and assistants, trained in operating the equipment, must be hired. This is in sharp contrast to the other arts where canvas, paint and brush or pencil and paper are all that is needed to aspire toward artistic ends. The price of cinematic equipment is dropping, but as Jean Cocteau has said, perhaps ironically, "Movies won't be an art until the materials are as inexpensive as paper and pencil." It is also thought that a clearly cut is- sue has been presented to the young per- son interested in the cinema: Here stands Hollywood and all the crass com- mercialism that it represents and there stand foreign countries and some inde- pendent film-makers from the United States; here stands the old order in the cinema and there stands the exuberant rising generation. This conception is far from accurate. The young person watches the motion pictures of the time because they are a fine form of escapism from reality in our "Age of Anxiety" (according to Time magazine), not because he is an enthus- iastic member of a new film-conscious generation. The motion picture can re- create reality according to our own de- sires, and that is why Hollywood is so popular-it panders to just these wishes. THE MOTION PICTURE made its mark in society before our parents even started going to school. Today, we may ridicule them for having enjoyed their past entertainment in the form of Bette Davis, Janet Gaynor and the younger version of Clark Gable. We may ridicule them for not realizing the "artistic values" inherent in the film-priceless values that were not upheld by the "in- dustry" that still feeds the world its weekly ration of celluloid at the corner Bijou. We may ridicule them today for swooning over the old movies on the late, late show every night while ignoring the current "8%Z" or "Aparajito" at the local 'art house." We have every right to berate them- for the same reason we castigate them for leaving us "not the best of all possible world," as Bunuel calls it. And in twenty or thirty years, we will feel the same sting of contemporary identification with cer- tain films or maybe some early television program when our children take over and ask us why we did not do a better job in cleaning up the mess. THE NOUVEAU ROMAN: ...the character is only the shadow of, himself' THE MOST INTERESTING recent de- velopment in French literature is the nouveau roman (new novel). The noveau roman is not really a school or even a movement in the usual meaning of the term; the term is a sort of trade mark which was first used by journalists to describe a certain number of individual efforts by various writers who share a total refusal of conventional novelistic forms. French critics love to classify and label everything; to chris en some- thing unknown and disturbing is to give it a new, reassuring existence. This is what happened to the nouveau roman. Around 1953, nobody suspected a "new novel" was about to be revealed. An un- known young agricultural engineer named Robbe-Grillet had just published his first book: "The Erasers". What a title! The puzzled critics did not know quite what to say. The following year another young man, Michel Butor, published his first novel: "Passage de Milan." A critic was impressed by a few similarities between the two novels and, in a moment of in- spiration, wrote that a new kind of realism had just been born. A few weeks later a famous and controversial essayist, Roland Barthes, published a long article which was to be the cornerstone of all future scholarship on thesubject. The nouveau roman was born. It was easy to discover other writers belonging to the same family: Nathalie Sarraute had already published three books: "Martereau" in 1953, "Portrait of a Man Unknown" in 1947 (for which Sar- tre had written a penetrating foreword, qualifying it as "anti-novel") and another one, "Tropisma" in 1939; Claude Simon had just published "Le Sacre du Prin- temps," an awkward but promising book; another young Swiss writer had,written a strange book, "Mahu ou le materiau." Even Beckett, famous for the world suc- cess of his play "Waiting for Godot," had published similar novels: "Molloy" in 1947, "Malone Dies" in 1951 and re- cently "Unnamable" in 1953. A whole family was discovered. For about six years it was a con- troversial family; every critic, every news- paper took a stand for or against-most of the time against. The public could not have ignored these new writers if it had wanted to! Butor was rewarded one of the most important literary prizes (the Prix Renaudot) for "A Change of Heart." But this was only a tactical maneuver by the "literary establish- ment": il faut diviser pour regner. Butor seemed salvageable; "A Change of Heart" was after all a sort of psychologi- cal novel. Why not use him to discredit his radical colleague Robbe-Grillet? The scheme did not work; Butor's next work was even less conventional than the first two! By 1960-61, even the most reaction- ary critic had to admit that Butor's "Degrees," Robbe-Grillet's "Jealousy" and "In the Labyrinth" and Claude Simon's "Flanders Road" were, if not truly good literature, at least a new kind of litera- ture. The nouveau roman became a little more respectable. By 1962, it was obvious to all young writers that to be "in," one had to write nouveaux romans, and they jumped onto the bandwagon, then rolling very fast, Suddenly everybody was writing nouveaux romans and will probably continue to do so until some young Turk rebels against them as old fashioned. The success of "Last Year in Marienbad," a film written by Robbe-Grillet, dramatizes this evolu- tion; the new novelist is no longer an unknown rebel, he is an accepted fashion- able intellectual. What does this all mean? Is it only a literary fashion, a short-lived infatua- tion with a new toy? Or is it a deep trend, well rooted in contemporary society? While the enemies of the new novelists (there are still quite a few) claim that they succeed because they know how to sell their products and have excellent public relations, their friends affirm that they are successful because their books fill a basic need in the contemporary scene. The controversy is an interesting one. Perhaps we may best examine it by first discovering the nature of the nouveau roman. r rO DEFINE the nouveau roman seems relatively easy, since at least three of the new novelists have extensively written on the problems of the novel: Nathalie Sarraute in "Age of Suspicion" Robbe-Grillet in "Pour un Nouveau Ro- man," Butor in "Repertoire." These writ- ers know contemporary li .erature well; By JEAN CARDUNER selves have ceased to believe. The character novel belongs very well to the past. It characterizes an epoch; that which marked the zenith of the individual. It is this double refusal of character and plot which is the first distinctive feature of the nouveau roman. And it is precisely because these young writers refuse to use the traditional form of the novel that they have been accused of "formalism" (a grave accusation in what he calls "I of the object" i: tions. The objec a function nor classical object Robbe-Grille's o nature and an bination of spa essay on "Natui edy," Robbe-G: key notions: tb at the surface o: of mystical or a: and corresponde "la profondeur' In this respect nouveau roman existentialism: t tre in "Nausea' in his "Phenom The existenti everything of mediately and them, to philoso to analyze, but exists and, in distinguish what has created, to the universe an ence in it. TI Malraux, Sartre of a radical di the world; this ABSURD of our The pages in hero Roquentin of the thing qu nut tree root, "The Stranger" sault describes t pages in which and the world have strongly i But he has gone Camus: their a not completely they repose c morphic metapl linked to man universe. What Robbe- novelists emphal dimension of Robbe-Grillet, a Sartre and C ("Nausea") and where Roquenti fought their des absurd, in quit young man wae Day beaches in really understan He knows that against it? He his life (his aes on this premise. THIS IMPORI coupled with the classical nc "psychological a people to believe is a sort of produced by con extreme view is nouveau roman, "characters" in the word, still protagonists. Any kind of author or by th from the nouves novels are psych Change of Heart trip from Paris the protagonist c of leaving his wi beginning of his go back to her wv "Jealousy" is the band; but inste Proust does in ' Grillet simply de husband sees it, ing a feeling. T with a puzzle wi Indeed, a nou in it something o it is the task the mystery or t of the protagon (Contin (Continued from page three) that one can say the nouveau roman is an "objective" novel. Indeed one wonders at times if these young writers have not simply applied what Maupassant says in his preface to "Pierre and Jean": "Psy- chology must be hidden in the novel like it is hidden in life, under the events of every day." Instead of explaining the state of mind of his characters, the "ob- jective" novelist presents the action or gesture which, in a specific situation, the protagonist's state of mind leads him to perform. This extreme objectivity is ac- tually subjective. Robbe-Grillet insists, and Sarraute agrees with him, that, The subjectivity is even greater than that of the traditional novel where the narrator most often seems ex- terior to the story he is telling, exterior to the world itself. This sub- jectivity is, I believe, the essential characteristic of the nouveau roman. The new novelist in his attempt to be "scientific" and to involve the reader has abandoned classical psychological anal- ysis (Proust is the last great French novelist to use it) in favor of a method characteristic of Kafka or Faulkner, who are the acknowledged masters of Robbe- Grillet and Claude Simon. In this respect we can say, with Na- thalie Sarraute, that the nouveau roman is the literary equivalent of modern non- objective painting. The novelist is like "the modern painter who tears off the object from the world of the spectator and deforms it in order to isolate its pictorial value." No wonder that many of the criticisms formulated against the nouveau roman are similiar to those directed at nonobjective painting, espe- cially the charge that the world created by these artists is a barren desert, emptied of all human values. To this criticism the new novelist answers that the novel he wants to write, far from being "dehumanized," has no other sub- ject than man and his situation in the world. Robbe-Grillet says: Man is present, in each page, each line, each word. Even if one finds many objects carefully described, one finds always and first of all the look which sees them, the thought which evokes them, the passion which de- forms them. The objects in our novels have never any presence outside of human perception. These lines could have been written by Sartre who, in his famous attack on the omniscient author formula, argued that an existentialist writer must limit the content of the novel to what actually "exists," that is, to what the characters perceive through their own consciousness, from the framework of their individual situation. All new novelists are very con- scious of the importance of "the point of view" and show extreme care and con- sistency in dealing with it. They are first of all dedicated craftsmen, lucidly prac- ticing their craft and always trying to improve it. Far from being, as are the surrealists, in favor of spontaneous ex- pression of "6criture automatique," they always limit their freedom of expression by imposing very strict rules on them- selves. Indeed they are very much like the writers of 1660: three centuries later they are the artisans of a new classicism. The importance given to technical details, the conscious, lucid, deliberate aspect of their works give a lot of readers, used to more naive and romantic enthusiasm, the feeling that the new novelists are nothing more than literary technologists, uninterested in humanity. W HAT HAS HAPPENED in the nouveau roman is that the level of humaniza- tion has shifted: the reader has become one of the characters in the novel. In the classical novel, the reader played no part whatever; he was simply a passive audience for the storyteller, so passive indeed that the author frequently felt the need to wake him up by addressing him directly. In the modern novel the reader has been more and more obliged to collaborate with the author in order to understand the novel. Sartre has gone so far as to say that no literary work exists without the active collaboration of the reader; the act of reading is a creative act which the author merely directs. The nouveau roman is systema- tically built on this assumption. Reading it often seems difficult because the reader has to find his own way in the book, indeed he has to create his own novel. The title of Robbe-Grillet's last novel, "In the Labyrinth," is in itself symbolic: all these novels are for the reader a labyrinth. Many readers who have no Ariane to help them are afraid of the Minotaur! Butor has built his three major novels on a subtle game involving author, character and reader. He has gone as far as writing an opera libretto on "Faust" in which there is no set order of scenes, but a multiple choice of possibilities. The reaction of the public will decide at each performance how the drama is going to evolve; perhaps no one will ever see the same opera twice! This opera has not yet been performed; seeing it should be in eresting. ALL THESE generalities may hint that the nouveau roman is not merely a new literary fad, but is truly, in the complete sense of the word, an aesthetic revolution. An excerpt from Claude Simon's latest novel "The Palace," in which he talks about the novelist, sup- ports this belief: But for some time he has concerned himself with something entirely dif- ferent, or else it is something en- tirely different that occupies him; wondering what it is that pushes a man to tell a story 'or to tell it to himself, he thought; the only dif- ference is that now he does it out loud.') that is, to reorganize, to reconstruct by means of verbal equivalents something that he has done or seen, as if he were not able to admit that what he has done or seen has not left more of a mark than a dream, thinking: 'Unless it is the contrary, unless he hopes that once told, once put into the form of words, all that begins to exist all alone, no longer needing someone to sustain it, that is, to supply itself with its meager forces, its feeble coolies' skelton as support: as if he were trying to tear from himself that violence, that thing which has chosen him as its domicile, using, possessing, consuming him . ..' Like any other being, the novelist is the "support" of a certain reality; but one day this reality invests him, possesses him and he tries to get rid of it through language, either by speaking or writing. This act of writing is a delivrance; it is not enough to write, it is necessary to communicate in order to transfer to others (the readers) the weight of reality. For him, the truth can only be the total, perfect correlation of his reality and of the words he uses. This may have always been true for the novelist, but most of the time he has been only vaguely aware of it. For the new novelist, this is THE essential truth. There is no possible compromise; the relationship be- tween reality and the word is con- sidered absolute. Therefore the novelist will not try to imitate, to approximate reality; he will try to fix it forever, to maintain it in an eternal present. And the reader is not invited to dream or to escape into an imaginary world; he is required to carry, in his turn, the reality the novelist has transmitted to him through language. The ambition of the new novelists may always have been the supreme ambition of all poets. But their stubborn struggle today is more important than ever if literature is to survive in an age of mass communications with all their impreci- sions. The new novelists are fighting to preserve human language; they are the true defenders of our culture. they have learned the lessons of Kafka, Joyce, Faulkner and Sartre. They refuse the classical concept of the Balzacian novel which depends on plot and char- acter. The plot of the "well made" novel has been obsolete for quite a long time; who can talk of a plot in "Remembrance of Things Past," "Ulysses" or "The Castle?" As for characters, they are slowly dying. To be sure, many novelists still write classical Balzacian novels with well rounded, recognizable characters. Like an architect who would keep building gothic cathedrals today, they do it, but don't really believe in it. Says Nathalie Sar- raute. Today the character is only the sha- dow of himself. It is with reluctance that the novelist grants him that which is able to make him too easily discoverable; the physical appear- ance, gestures, actions, sensations, current sentiments known and stud- ied for a long time, which together give him a readily recognizable life- like appearance and provide the reader a convenient handle. Even the name with which it is necessary to dress him is troublesome to the author. Echoes Robbe-Grillet: In fact, the creators of characters in the traditional sense no longer succeed in presenting us anything but marionettes in which they them- France). This accusation is absurd since, far from codifying a new form, they are trying to discover one: We don't know what a novel must be, a true novel; we only know that today's novel will be what we make it today, and that we must not cultivate a resemblance to what it was yester- day, but it is up to us to further advance it, (Robbe-Grillet). Therefore, the new novelists are essen- tially pioneers in search of new concepts of the novel. This is the common ground which unifies their works. Whatever their differences, and they are numerous, they all present the same deliberately experi- mental aspect; the reader always has the feeling he is journeying into virgin lands (often barren) for his greatest pleasure or discomfort. To read a nouveau roman is a genuine adventure: one never knows what will happen, or if anything actually will happen. THIS SEARCH is first characterized by the style the author uses in describ- ing the world as objectively as possible. For this reason the terms "objective novel" or "new realism" are sometimes used to describe these works. In an in- terview, Robbe-Grillet said that "scien- tific observation consists of describing without ever interpreting-never giving a meaning to the objects." Roland Barthes was the first critic to point to Poge Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1964