The beginning of Matissa by John Fowles is highly provocative and exhibits evidence of several concepts and theories. Several times in the text, Fowles uses both the notion of the death of the author and the notion of post-structuralism as well as psychoanalytical theory. Miles Green is a patient in an unfamiliar institution, or asylum, or hospital where the reader is uncertain as to where Greene actually is. This, in a way, is the idea of decentred universe, since Green does not know where he is; he is deconstructed from his reality, what he is familiar with. All we know from the text is that the patient is undergoing a series of treatment by Dr. A. Delfie, whom asks Green several routine questions and sees if he is able to answer them. A question Green asks is how long he has been where he is, Dr. Delfie answers “just a few pages.” Green questions the use of ‘pages’ and corrects her by saying ‘days.’ Dr. Delfie states that “You’ve mislaid your identity, Mr. Green. What I have to work on is your basic sense of reality. And that seems in good shape.”(14). Judging from this dialogue, it is as if Fowles is using post-structuralism conception. If I am, in fact, interpreting this passage correctly, the word ‘pages’ is put in place of ‘days,’ ‘days’ conceivably being the center of the two characters’ discourse. It is evident that the word ‘days’ should have been used in the sentence as opposed to ‘pages.’ In addition to this, another linguistic dialogue between Dr. Delfie and Green develops during the sexual treatment session. Instructing him to be “a little more erotic,” Green replies “I can’t. I don’t know you from Adam.” (Green should have said Eve.) Dr. Delfie says “Mr. Green, the person I want you not to know me from is Eve. Or are you trying to tell me you’d rather have this treatment from a male nurse and doctor?”(19). This raises a question of his sexuality—of course one could interpret this slip of the tongue as a Freudian slip, psychoanalytically speaking—whether he has a repressed homosexual desire. In a post-structuralist view, this, again, is a linguistic idiosyncrasy.
The character of Dr. Delfie is, in itself, deconstructed as we read part two of the text. At this point in the story, it is unclear whether the reader should refer to the character of Dr. Delfie as Dr. Delfie or Erato—since they are theoretically the same character but portrayed in two different contexts—however, it is interesting that Fowles purposely provokes this sentiment within the reader. Another means of deconstruction by deconstructing Erato’s character. She undergoes a metamorphosis, transforming into a punk rocker, who is a kind of representation of the anti-misogynist female in a most extreme form: a punk in the sense of dark make-up and garment, a heavy-metal musician carrying an electric guitar, and a shaved, bleached head. Then she metamorphoses into Erato, the goddess of lyrical, ardent poetry, crowned with a wreath of Ophelia roses, in a light, long tunic, and carries a lyre across her body. Green considers it a far more feminine appearance, whereas Erato considers her appearance to be a simpler way to exploit her. Alright, I will try not venture into Feminist criticism land (not just yet, anyway.) In their discourse, Erato expresses her opinion of the novel. “Death of the novel, that’s a laugh. I wish to all my famous relations it was. And good riddance…It’s what I loathe about this rotten country. And America, that’s the worse. At least the French are doing their best to kill the whole stupid thing off for good.”(66). Comical yet intriguing are Erato’s words of deconstruction and the idea of the death of the author, or in her discourse, ‘death of the novel.’ Surely she is referring the work of Jacques Derrida, Roland Barthes, among the several post-structuralists/deconstructionists. That’s it for now.
I hope this close-reading is, at least, a bit understandable and valid.
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
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I like how you used post-structuralist theory to look at Mantissa. Your identification of his location as being decentered is a perfect example of the real world in relation to language. He does not know where he is but only how it is represented, and language is the only way in which he can find out where he is. Ultimately he has trouble identifying where he truly is considering he cannot trust the Doctor's word.
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